APRIL 3, 2013
Media Contact: Doug Ramsey, 858-822-5825, dramsey@ucsd.edu
Program Contacts: Eliza Slavet, 858-534-1207, eslavet@ucsd.edu or Emily Sevier, esevier@ucsd.edu
Engineers who think like artists, physicists who thinks like dancers, scientists who think like poets, and designers who think like Mother Nature: These are some of the researchers from the University of California, San Diego on display at a public event on Friday, April 12 that will extol and explore the virtues of interdisciplinary collaboration and creativity. UC San Diego’s Sixth College is staging the event, AUDACIOUS SPECULATIONS, between 6pm and 9pm on April 12, 2013. The presentations will take place on the UCSD campus in Atkinson Hall, the headquarters of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2).
The series of short, performative presentations will showcase how researchers, artists, activists and entrepreneurs can make “something from nothing” – transforming the titular “audacious speculations” into reality. For program details, visit the event website at http://audacious.calit2.net.
“This event is part of a broader program in which we are exploring the connections and productive tensions between realms of activity that are usually considered totally distinct,” said Eliza Slavet, co-curator of the event and Director of Art & Technology for Sixth College’s Academic Programs. “What we are really interested in is how not only artists, but rather all creative researchers (whether scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs or activists) engage in similar processes of moving from the realm of the speculative, fantastic and imaginary to the realm of material reality. By bringing together researchers who are pushing the envelope in these areas, we are seeking to understand the creative audacity that can lead to great leaps forward.”
“Audacious Speculations highlights the excitement of radical innovation at UCSD,” said Liz Losh, Director of Academic Programs at Sixth College. “This event demonstrates how the Culture, Art & Technology Program is fostering creativity and interdisciplinarity: Audacious Speculations brings together people working on cutting-edge research, audacious creativity, and curriculum design, producing an amazing experience which will inspire our students and the larger community.”
The evening event will consist of 11 presentations on research that is so ambitious that people often roll their eyes in disbelief. Topics range from activist projects that transform the socio-political landscape, to scientific research and experiments that are both poetic and speculative. Documenting both existing and speculative work, the speakers will explore: movies for monkeys; a gestural language of physics; tracking trash in Tijuana; butterflies without borders; beautiful brains; biomimicry; hypnotic embodiment of wild foxes; smart underwear and biotattoos; silhouettes for the 21st century; a fashionable approach to science education; and a high-tech approach to finding your bliss.
“This promises to be one of the most eclectic and insightful meetings we have hosted here at UC San Diego,” said Calit2 UCSD division director Ramesh Rao, who will present his own work on the use of wearable electronic sensors to monitor heart-rate variability – and train the body to reduce stress and even reach a state of bliss. “We have experimented with experts in yoga, and it’s clear that the technology we are developing could become a powerful new tool for stress management.” Rao is also a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering department of the UCSD’s Jacobs School of Engineering.
AUDACIOUS SPECULATIONS grew out of a new curriculum for Sixth College’s Culture, Art & Technology program. The curriculum includes four interdisciplinary courses to be taught for the first time in Spring 2013. They include:
Prof. Dominguez will co-emcee the evening program with history professor Cathy Gere. In addition to Calit2’s Rao, the presenters include Jacopo Annese, a professor of radiology and director of The Brain Observatory at UC San Diego; Physics professor and observational astrophysicist Adam Burgasser; environmental advocate Oscar Romo; Harvey Mudd professor of media studies Rachel Mayeri; Visual Arts MFA candidates Hermione Spriggs and Heidi Kayser; Saura Naderi, who leads Calit2’s MyLab outreach program; Materials Science and Engineering Ph.D. student Michael Porter, who develops materials inspired by those found in nature; and NanoEngineering postdoctoral researcher Joshua Windmiller from the Laboratory for NanoBioElectronics, where he develops printed biosensors, bioelectronics and biofuel cells.
Support for AUDACIOUS SPECULATIONS came from the UC San Diego Center for the Humanities, UC Institute for Research in the Arts (UCIRA), the Sixth College Parents’ Fund, Calit2 and the gallery@calit2.
Images and ephemera from the program will be exhibited in the Sixth College’s ARTifact Gallery. There will be an opening reception for the exhibition from 3pm to 5pm on April 12, prior to the event in Atkinson Hall. The gallery is located on the second floor of Pepper Canyon Hall. It is part of the Culture, Art & Technology Program of Sixth College.
The event and companion exhibit were curated by Emily Sevier and Eliza Slavet. AUDACIOUS SPECULATIONS was originally conceived by Slavet and co-emcee Cathy Gere. Twitter users are invited to follow tweets related to the event under the hashtag #AudSpec.
Related Links
AUDACIOUS SPECULATIONS http://audacious.calit2.net
ARTifact Gallery http://sixth.ucsd.edu/cat/artifact/index.html
Sixth College http://sixth.ucsd.edu
Calit2 http://www.calit2.net