How does technical art history relate to the burgeoning field of heritage science? Has technical art history become part of heritage science? Can both disciplines be considered counterparts within the ...
Stop by the CCCAC during this time to check out the works submitted to the show this year! For Artists Submitting to the Exhibition: Drop your art off at the CCCAC by March 29 at 2PM Pick up your art ...
Scientists have often invited the public to see what they see, using everything from engraved woodblocks to electron microscopes to explore the complexity of the scientific enterprise and the beauty ...
Installation view of the Center for PostNatural History section in "Intimate Science," at Miller Gallery (all images courtesy Miller Gallery unless otherwise noted) New Art/Science Affinities feels ...
Inspired by Dalí’s vision and his engagement with scientific work, this program seeks to explore the limits of knowledge and ...
After two years of design, research, and creativity, Princeton’s 2025 Art of Science Exhibition is almost ready to open. The exhibition will feature 33 two-dimensional still images and roughly a dozen ...
A misleading image in a medical textbook could have life and death implications, but some disciplines can deploy myth and metaphor to convey their science through art. In the third episode of this six ...
Designers and artists often require scientific knowledge in order to achieve their creative goals. This self-directed, project driven course empowers students to identify key scientific questions ...
The fall art season will be dominated — or maybe overwhelmed — by “PST Art: Art & Science Collide,” a sprawling array of more than 70 exhibitions at area museums and exhibition spaces, large and small ...
[Left] Marcel Duchamp's Fountain, 1917, via Wikimedia Commons, [Right] Duchamp smoking in front of Fountain, Duchamp Retrospective, Pasadena Art Museum, 1963 Inspired by Marcel Duchamp’s Readymades, a ...
This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American Annalisa Crannell goes to art museums with ...