Vancouver, BC. October 8, 2019 (for immediate release) Curiosity Collider, a Vancouver-based not-for-profit organization, will be hosting its inaugural art-science Collisions Festival: Invasive Systems at the VIVO Media Arts Centre from November 8 to 10, 2019. The festival features an art-science exhibition showcasing independent works and collaborative works by artist/scientist pairs, a hands-on DNA sonification workshop, an opening reception with performances, and guided discussions and tours.
Curated by Curiosity Collider's Creative Director Char Hoyt, the theme of the festival focuses on the "invasive systems" that surround us - from technology and infections, to pollution and invasive species. "We want to create a space to explore the influence of the invasive aspects of our world on our inner and outer lives" said Char. "We will examine our observations from both scientific and artistic perspectives - are these influences beneficial, inevitable, or preventable?” Attendees can anticipate a deep dive into the delicate and complicated nature of how both living and inanimate things redefine our lives and environments - through visual art, multimedia installations, and interactive experiences.
"I am not a scientist and do not come from a family of scientists, but I have always appreciated knowing how things work, how things are connected and how things evolve - collaboration between art and science feel natural to me," said Vancouver artist Dzee Lousie. "Both artists and scientists are curious, perform experiments and are driven by questions." Dzee's work Crossing, an interactive puzzle painting that examines how microbial colonies can impact our behaviours and processes in our body, is the result of a collaboration with UBC PhD candidate Linda Horianopoulos. "As scientists, we often want people to take notice of our work and engage with it. I think that art attracts people to do exactly that," said Linda.
The sculptural work Invasion by Prince George artist Twyla Exner explores the remnants of technology. "My artworks propose hybrids of technological structures and living organisms. They take form as abandoned technologies that have sprouted with new life, clever artificialities that imitate nature, or biotechnological fixtures of the not-so-distant future," Twyla shared. Like Dzee, she feels that artists and scientists share the sense of curiosity, experimentation, and creative problem solving. "Both art and science have the ability to tell stories and shape how people see and interpret the world around them."
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