ABSTRACT

Over the last two decades, multiple initiatives of transdisciplinary collaboration across art, science, and technology have seen the light of day. Why, by whom, and under what circumstances are such initiatives promoted? What does their experimental character look like - and what can be learned, epistemologically and institutionally, from probing the multiple practices of "art/science" at work?

In answer to the questions raised, Practicing Art/Science contrasts topical positions and insightful case studies, ranging from the detailed investigation of "art at the nanoscale" to the material analysis of Leonardo’s Mona Lisa and its cracked smile. In so doing, this volume brings to bear the "practice turn" in science and technology studies on the empirical investigation of multifaceted experimentation across contemporary art, science, and technology in situ. Against the background of current discourse on "artistic research," the introduction not only explains the particular relevance of the "practice turn" in STS to tackle the interdisciplinary task at hand, but offers also a timely survey of varying strands of artistic experimentation.

In bringing together ground-breaking studies from internationally renowned scholars and upcoming researchers in sociology, art theory and artistic practice, as well as history and philosophy of science, Practicing Art/Science will be essential reading for practitioners and professionals in said fields, as well as postgraduate students and representatives of higher education and research policy more broadly.

chapter

Introduction

1Experimenting with “art/science”?

part I|60 pages

Positions

chapter 1|25 pages

Engaging performative contradiction

21Introducing the rhetorics of practice and method to artist researchers

chapter 2|11 pages

Contemporary art as a new paradigm?

An artistic revolution in light of the history of science

part II|116 pages

Practices

chapter 4|21 pages

Material play and artistic renderings

81The production of essentially useless nanotechnology

chapter 5|24 pages

Probing the art/science binary

Notes on the experimental achievement of shared perception

chapter 6|17 pages

From heterogeneity to hybridity?

Working and living in arts-based research

chapter 7|22 pages

Artworks in and as practices

The relevance of particulars

chapter 8|31 pages

On the discrepancy between objects and things

An ecological approach 1

part III|55 pages

Implications

chapter 9|20 pages

Re-programmed art

197Overcoming obsolescence and opening up programmed and kinetic artworks

chapter 10|20 pages

Back to the future

Bogomir Ecker’s Tropfsteinmaschine as a thought experiment in stone

chapter 11|14 pages

Epistemics and aesthetics of experimentation

Towards a hybrid heuristics?