Matthew Wisnioski: Aesthetic Virtue in the Defense Institute
Matthew Wisnioski studies the many collaborations between artists, engineers, and scientists in the 1960s from the engineers’ and scientists’ perspective. His paper will examine the dramatic transformations in MIT’s art scene in the postwar period, when the Institute created art courses for engineers, opened the Hayden Gallery, established a faculty Committee on the Visual Arts, and pioneered art/science/technology collaboration in the Center for Advanced Visual Studies. He argues that for scientists and engineers, art was not a neutral or incidental pursuit; it conjured contradictory values of hybridity and purity; elite expertise and participatory democracy; the neutrality of knowledge and its inherent politics. Scientists, engineers, and artists alike shared the discordant desire to make technology human.
This presentation was part of "Systems, Process, Art, and the Social" a FAST event held on February 4, 2011, as part of MIT's 150th Anniversary.
Comments (0)
It looks like no one has posted a comment yet. You can be the first!
You need to log in, in order to post comments. If you don’t have an account yet, sign up now!
- Created
- June 02, 2011 14:23
- Category
- Tags
- License
- All Rights Reserved (What is this?)
- Formats
- H.264 Video (mp4), mov
- Additional Files
- Viewed
- 5156 times
More from Arts at MIT
Open Rehearsal, Gustavo Dudamel
Added 3 years ago | 00:26:36 | 15553 views
Inflatables at the FAST Future Foru...
Added 2 years ago | 00:03:25 | 5183 views
Windscreen by Meejin Yoon, Associat...
Added almost 2 years ago | 00:00:43 | 4925 views
Gradated Field at the FAST Future F...
Added 2 years ago | 00:03:21 | 4681 views
The Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts
Added 1 year ago | 01:26:47 | 1786 views
aFloat
Added 2 years ago | 00:04:34 | 3832 views
