LAZNIA 1 LAZNIA 2 2015 - ART+SCIENCE MEETING 2015
Art+Science Meeting 2015 is a continuation of a project realised by Laznia CCA since 2011. It consists of events presenting works of the most eminent world artists who collaborate with the scientists or whose work balances between science and art and undertakes issues concerning artificial life and artificial intelligence, contributing to the discussion on post-human condition. First proposal is NEARLY HUMAN curated by Jasia Reichardt: the opening: 8 May 2015, 6 pm., LAZNIA 2 at Nowy Port. Next opening of Art+Science Meeting is planned on 31st of May in CCA Laznia on Dolne Miasto. We will open two exhibitions:  GUY BEN-ARY – NERVOPLASTICA oraz PATRICK TRESSET curated by Ryszard W.Kluszczynski. Closing exhibition of Art+Science Meeting 2015  - DAMIEN HIRST – NEW RELIGION is planned to be opened on 24th of July, 8:00 pm in CCA Laznia 1 in Gdansk on Dolne Miasto.
 
 
Project Art+Science Meeting 2015 supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage. The exhibition "Nearly Human" is a part of “Soundplay festival and Man|Machine workshops and exhibitions within Art+Science Meeting project “ supported by a grant from Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway through the EEA Grants and co-financed by the Polish funds within the framework of the “Promotion of Diversity in Culture and Arts within European Cultural Heritage” Programme.
 
      
 
 
EXHIBITIONS
 
Nearly Human
Laznia 2 Centre for Contemporary Art, 5 Strajku Dokerów Str., Gdańsk - Nowy Port
8.05 – 5.07.2015
19.09 – 31.10.2015 / Porsgrunn, Norwegia, Kunsthall Grenland
Curator: Jasia Reichardt
Coordination: Tymoteusz Skiba, Anna Szynwelska
The opaning in Gdańsk: 8 May, 6 pm
The meeting with curator of the exhibition and other guests: 8 May, 7 pm 
Screening of “Metropolis” (1927), dir. Fritz Lang: 10 May 2015, at 5 pm
 
The Art+Science Meeting project has been subsidized by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage.
 
The Art+Science Meeting Project is being realized since 2011 by the Laznia Centre for Contemporary Art in Gdansk. The Art+Science Meeting project presents art and science through an expanded exhibition, workshop, publication, meeting and debate program as two different perspectives of the same reality. The interdisciplinary open to discussion character of the project gives a possibility to present the achievements of world’s most outstanding artists who create in the area of science and technology. It also allows a wider look on the contemporary civilization for which science and technology are progress conditions but still remain opaque to most people.
 
The subject of this exhibition is human imagination and its thirst to create a parallel world of machines, puppets, dolls, automata, robots, which are nearly but not quite like us. Today, the population of these imaginary beings and machines occupies its own world in art, in fiction, in film, and in many aspects of our lives. 
The exhibition involves some 70 participants and encompasses three sections. The first section, which represents the majority of the exhibits consists of printed images, which deal with the history of ideas that touch on things that are nearly human. They represent the background of our desire to make things that either look like, or function, as we do. The second section includes original works, which are shown as videos on screens. The artists are: Pierre Bastien, Daisuke Furuike, Theo Jansen, and Chico MacMurtrie. The third section includes six kinetic works. These are by Richard Kriesche, Tim Lewis, Tony Oursler, Studio Azzurro, Jim Whiting and Christiaan Zwanikken.
 
 
 
Project supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage. The exhibition  is a part of a project supported by EEG funds from Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway as well as local resources within the framework of the “Promotion of Diversity in Culture and Arts within European Cultural Heritage” Programme.
 
Jasia Reichardt, curator of the exhibition, is a writer on art and an exhibition organiser. She is interested in art that encroaches on other fields, be it science or literature and has spent many years following up the connections between art and technology. One of her books is about the history of robots, and her best know exhibition, Cybernetic Serendipity, which was about the computer and the arts, was presented at the ICA in London in 1968.
 
 
Guy Ben-Ary – Nervoplastica
Laznia Centre for Contemporary Art - 1 Jaskółcza Str., Gdańsk - Dolne Miasto
Opening: 31 May 2015, 6 pm
Exhibition opened: 31.05 – 14.06.2015
Curator: Ryszard W. Kluszczyński
Coordination: Anna Szynwelska
 
Co-operation from Intercollegiate Faculty of Biotechnology UG&MUG Department:
prof. Ewa Łojkowska
dr Anna Kawiak
The projects presented at the "Nervoplastica" exhibition were researched and developed at SymbioticA - Centre of Excellence in Biological Arts at The School of Anatomy, Physiology & Human Biology, The University of Western Australia.
 
The meeting with curator, artists and invitated guests - Fine Art Academy, Targ Węglowy 1, 1 June, 6 pm
 
Guy Ben-Ary during fifteen years of his practice have been combining the creative art with neurology. His projects, carried out in collaboration with scientists and other artists, balance between bioart and new media art. In his works, cultured neural networks play a role of the living component remaining in the interactive relationship with the technical, digital and robotic items. Exhibition Nervoplastica shows three examples of cultural works which use neuronal cultures - a kind of brain resulting from bioengineering treatments. In-Potentia, the work by Guy Ben-Ary and Kerstin Hudson, is a sculpture using cultured brain. In the installation The Living Screen, created together with Tanya Visocevic, living cells are integrated into the structure of the cinematographic camera, fulfilling the function of the screen there. In the installation Snowflake, realized together with Boryana Rossa, neural network composed of rat’s cells is stimulated with snowflake image in order to create the memory or dream of the snowflake. All three works are examples of hybrid relationship of art and science. They transfer neural forms grown in the laboratory to cultural sphere as art projects, inviting the audience to experience and reflect on new post-biological reality. Besides those two works, exhibition will also include submitted documentation of author’s other works, creative installation - MEART – Semi-living Artist and Silent Barrage, together with the drawings.
 
The projects presented at the "Nervoplastica" exhibition were researched and developed at SymbioticA - Centre of Excellence in Biological Arts at The School of Anatomy, Physiology & Human Biology, The University of Western Australia.
Project supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage. 
 
 
 
Patrick Tresset – Human Traits
Laznia Centre for Contemporary Art - 1 Jaskółcza Str., Gdańsk - Dolne Miasto
31.05 – 05.07.2015
Curator: Ryszard W. Kluszczyński
Coordination: Anna Szynwelska
 
 
Exhibition of French artist and scientist Patrick Tresset deals with the issues of human and artificial creativity, and our relationship with the new generation of machines. His works are robotic forms, which, thanks to the use of prepared for this purpose computer programs, are able to draw portraits. Tresset, after several years of artistic activity as a painter and illustrator, having lost capability of this kind of creative work in 2003, began the study of computer and robotic systems that would be able to take a similar form of activity, while retaining his distinctive artistic style. The result of these studies are presented within the exhibition. 3 Robots Named Paul draw portraits of exhibition’s visitors. Paul – IX is a robot drawing still life from observation. Peter is busy with drawing signs and erasing them afterwards. Its activity is stimulated by events taking place in the room, which can make him excited or bored or depressed. All three robotic systems create artifacts, as well as carry out performances. They are works of art and at the same time they create art. Their creative activity develops in the space between art, computer science, robotics and artificial intelligence.
 
Project supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage. The exhibition is a part of a project supported by EEG funds from Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway as well as local resources within the framework of the “Promotion of Diversity in Culture and Arts within European Cultural Heritage” Programme.
 
Damien Hirst – New Religion
Laznia Centre for Contemporary Art - 1 Jaskółcza Str., Gdańsk - Dolne Miasto
24.07 – 27.09.2015
Curators: Paul Stolper, Linsey Young, Anna Szynwelska
 
Throughout the course of Damien Hirst’s career, belief has been at the heart of his work. Early medicine cabinets such as God, 1989, pitched an unquestioning belief in scientific rationalism – the conviction that pills can cure you – against the more subjective belief in religion and the redemptive healing power of God. This equation gave form to Hirst’s disappointment that a belief in art did not exist in a similar manner to the way that God or science might be unquestionably believed in. Without this belief in art, any sense of meaning is dissipated; it being through the artifice of art and its formal structures that the illusions of life can be recognised.
‘New Religion’, Hirst’s latest project, is grounded in belief and extends this outlook in new directions. The different elements that make up ‘New Religion’ form a chapel dedicated to desire, a desire to keep mortality at bay but which can’t help confront death at the same time. Belief in religion and medicine is grounded in this desire, confirmed here by its representation as art; where, for instance, The Holy Trinity is presented as a pie-chart that through logic attempts to prove the wholly unprovable.
 
The exhibition is organized in cooperation with British Council and Paul Stolper Gallery
Project supported by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage. 
 
 
 
 
 
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