Showing posts with label post-modernism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post-modernism. Show all posts

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Symbiotica - where art meets science

What happens when you put artists in residence in a science laboratory? Does soul emerge? How might scientists see themselves and their work differently? That is something I was keen to find out when I visited SymbioticA at the University of Western Australia.

I enter the human biology and anatomy building tentatively. I can't help noticing art work. Brightly coloured large screen prints of things you might expect to find under a microscope... later the scientist director in charge of SymbioticA, Stuart Bunt, tells me this was their early approach to marrying art and the biological sciences - "the ooh aah" stuff. He takes me on a tour of the building, pointing to the 3-dimensional objects - foetuses made from casts with objects carefully integrated into them....stories of evolution, birth, transformation. He introduces me to the artist, Hans, who curates the displays as well as being the departments cast maker of teaching skulls and body parts. He has his own little cubbyhole, lots of shelves filled with found objects and ongoing projects - a treasure trove.

"But", says Stuart, "the stuff we are doing now, is not something you can put on a wall... we are creating art with tissues and cells and they are only transient. For example, one artist created pig wings out of tissue."

This is intriguing and I want to find out more. But first I ask how the biology students respond to the art work around them. "Mostly it is ignored," says Stuart, "The students are focussed on the science - they can't see how artistic creativity might help with design and thinking. Even visiting teachers are impatient with the art program - they just want to learn about our scientific research and procedures."

Hmmm, I wonder, so who actually benefits from the artist in residence program? Do the scientists? How might it be possible to help people see the intrinsic benefits of artistic thinking within science? But are there any?

Stuart is concerned now that the seminar which I am here for is about to start and leads me up the stairs, out the back to a large room under the eaves, full of desks, computers, art magazines, a sofa and people. I am introduced to the artists in resident here - some working on tissue culture projects. One lady, with her assistant, is a famous artist from France. SymbioticA has just won a major international award and is renown across the international art world. A Finnish attache to the cultural department is here to set up a sister facility in the northern tip of Finland and is giving a seminar.

The ensuing discussion is vibrant - discussions about the ethics of tissue art, do cells have consciousness, what is the purpose of this sort of art, what it feels like as an artist to be doing it, does soul exist in tissues or even in humans? It is clear that growing cells taken from your own body is not a simplistic art form.

Oran, who has been the artist manager of the group for seven years, explains to me a bit more about the program. How artists initially put in a concept proposal for their art project, then when they come they are teamed up with a scientist mentor and taught the scientific procedures. As they gain hands on understanding their concept changes. Prior to starting their art they are required to put in an ethics proposal to the university ethics committee. Oran explains how important this is in the artistic journey - and usually ethics is a theme that comes strongly out of the art.

Because there might be between three to seven artists at any one time, the artists have a place where art culture and ways of thinking, being and talking is alive and vibrant. Walking through a set of doors then puts them into the culture of the scientist (as well as tissue culture.)

But what is the effect on the scientists? "Most of the older scientists are not that interested in the program. Our mentors are the younger postdoc scientists, who are still curious... just finished their PhD and now are being locked into more applied research. They still want an outlet for their curiosity. They are the ones who are likely to come to our weekly sessions."

Oran explains to me how funding has constrained biological research into quite tight outcomes - that the pure science that scientists used to do is no longer possible - scientists don't have the luxury to just play and see what emerges. But the artists can - that is their job - to play. Not necessarily to play in the sense that a scientist might play - which results in innovation - but to play with the meaning of what the scientists are doing. As a result it helps the scientists see the possibilities and the consequences of where their research might be leading. It adds a cultural awareness, an extra perception.

This now seems to me the punch line... why art in science is important. We tend to think of "foresight" as something that comes from scientific prediction, system awareness and modelling. But this can only lead to seeing what the paradigm you are using allows you to see. Postmodern art has the capacity to "see" in different ways. When conversations happen between artists and scientists new perceptions emerge. Are they productive, and do they earn money? Possibly not, in the way that pure research play might have yielded money making inventions.

But today where our concern is sustainable living in a fragile world this exploration of the meaning of the very building blocks of physical life could be an important contribution in helping us develop sustainable consciousness.

SymbioticA offer undergraduate courses for science and humanity students in the biological arts. So far no science students have taken this up. Why not? What might a high school science education be like that develops curiosity, creativity and desire to explore meaning, rather than students totally focussed on career pathways?

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Can science be feminine?


I am sitting in a workshop for Playback Theatre. We are invited to tell our stories about Women's Business/ Men's Business. I find myself saying I have a story, even though I have no idea what it is...

I surprise myself as I explain how for many years I worked in a man's world of science, engineering and industry and how I strove to fit into this world earning the respect of its inhabitants. But then I began to realise that in embracing this scientific modernistic economic rational perspective and ways of doing and being that I was supressing a really important part of myself.
When I started creating sculptures of femine forms I realised that I was beginning to reclaim this part of myself - my women's ways of knowing and being. My further research into women's ways of knowing (Belinky et al) helped me to see that I wasn't alone in wanting more from science - I wanted to come to know the world in rich interconnected ways, marrying objectivity with intuition, relationships and history - and this is what women want!

As the actors play back my story showing the conflict between the masculine and feminine I wonder why this story came to the surface. After all, the research on women's ways of knowing has been around since 1982, and formed part of feminine discourse for last 20 plus years. But has it really filtered down into everday science education that we see in schools?

What is science anyway? At the core of its meaning is the verb "scire" - to know.... to inquire into something.... and over time this has become associated with a particular way of coming to know.

While we see more ethical issues, more stories about science and more relevant contexts to appeal to girls in science classes, modernist science seems to still dominate the way students discuss and think about science - dispassionate debate, creating assertions and defending them. Does this turn off the female students? Mine certainly have said so. Perhaps we need to allow students to be in three minds about something, to admit to uncertainty and change in thinking, to role play possibilities, consider other ways of knowing, get inside the thinking of the scientist, and to reflect on their own ways of knowing and being that they are bringing.

So are these different approaches a result of the gender divide? Is there a mens science and a womens science? Perhaps they also reflect the difference in modernism (a more masculine voice) and post-modernism (a more feminine voice)? What might then be an integral voice?

As we see english curriculum move to embrace post-modernist sensitivities, should science be doing the same? After all this generation have only grown up in a post-modern world... perhaps relevance to them is more than providing current contexts, it is also being congruent with the very knowledge paradigm that they are living in.

So what might an integral science be like and could this honour both men's and women's ways of knowing the world?