A very public affair: art meets science |
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Authors: | Ken Arnold |
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Affiliation: | 1. Medical Museion, Copenhagen, Denmark;2. Copenhagen University, Copenhagen, Denmark;3. The Wellcome Trust, London, UKk.arnold@gmail.com |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTWhat happens in interdisciplinary practices between the arts and sciences? What determines their successes and failures, and how they should be conducted? Here I propose that we can deepen our understanding of them by looking at the role of one specific and, to my mind, vital aspect of many (most?) successful art/science collaborations, namely their presence in public. More specifically, I suggest that museums, having played a crucial historical role in shaping some specialized disciplinary thought, are now well-placed to encourage an opposite tendency towards trans-disciplinary activity. I elaborate this argument by focusing on three characteristics of museums that have made them ideal places to locate art-science collaborations: the role of exhibitions as units of investigation; the ascendency of artist/curators as unusual enquirers; and the enduring value of middle-sized things in these risky initiatives. |
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Keywords: | Museum object public exhibition curator research |
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