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Rensselaer To Explore the Connections Between Science, Art, and Technology
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute will host a colloquium next
week to discuss and explore the evolving convergence of art and
science.
Four renowned researchers and artists will convene to tackle
questions about the evolution of aesthetic perception, and how
art, music, science, and technology enhance our understanding
of human sensibilities, communication, and cognition.
The discussions and presentations will make up the first day
of the 9th
Annual Colloquium on Teaching & Learning, titled “The
Science of Art – The Art of Science.” The two-day conference
will take place May 11-12 in the theater of the Curtis R. Priem
Experimental Media & Performing Arts Center
(EMPAC).
The event is free and open to the public. Local school
district faculty and administrators are encouraged to attend.
Lunch will be served both days. Following the final
presentations on Monday, May 11, will be a reception featuring
live music and electronic art displays.
“With EMPAC becoming a reality, we should begin to explore
what it really means, as a platform for art, science, teaching,
and learning,” said Prabhat Hajela, vice provost and dean of
undergraduate education at Rensselaer. “It is important to look
at new possibilities that this exciting new platform affords,
not only the obvious ones related to music and art, but also
those related to entirely new pedagogies of immersive teaching
and learning. Presentations and discussions at the workshop
will hopefully stimulate new thinking and plant the seeds of
interesting new questions for students, researchers, and
artists to investigate.”
Keynote speakers for the first day of the colloquium
are:
- Roger Reynolds — Professor of Music, UC San Diego
At the Interface of Art and Science: Opportunity,
Manifestation, Transformation, Obligation
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Andrea R. Halpern —
Professor of Psychology, Bucknell University
Mental Concerts: Musical Imagery and the Brain
- Marina Wallace – Professor of Art, Central Saint
Martins College of Art & Design, London
Head On: Art with the Brain in Mind
- Michael Balter — Author of The Goddess and the
Bull
The Origin of Symbolism and
Art
Following the presentations, the four keynote speakers will
hold a panel discussion on the topic of The Science of
Art —The Art of Science.
The second day of the colloquium will feature morning
talks by several Rensselaer researchers, including Mark Changizi,
of the Department of Cognitive Science; Barb Cutler, of the
Department of Computer Science; Suvranu De, of the
Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering;
and Jonas
Braasch, of the School of Architecture.
This year’s Colloquium on Teaching & Learning is
sponsored by the Rensselaer Office of the
Provost and organized by the Anderson Center for Innovation
in Undergraduate Education and EMPAC.
Visit ciue.rpi.edu/colloquium.html
for the complete schedule and registration information.
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Published
May 4,
2009 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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