The Data Body on the Dissection Table. Arts, Humanities and Complex Networks

Le 4 juin, je co-organise pour Leonardo/Olats en collaboration avec le Medical Museion de Copenhague cette table-ronde.

The Data Body on the Dissection Table

Arts, Humanities, Medicine and Complex Networks

Evening Event – June 4th 2013 – 6:30 – 9 pm

Medical Museion, Bredgade 62 DK-1260 Copenhagen K

Dissection reveals what lies beneath the skin, but for a brief moment in time, and for a priviledged few. Depictions, models, and preservations have long been used to share what dissection uncovers; from ancient anatomical drawings to today’s virtual 3D anatomies.

In the 18th Century skinned “écorché” figures and anatomical waxes were constructed to reveal systems of interlocking bones, balanced pairs of muscles, and delicately entangled traceries of nerves and blood vessels. The Anatomy Lesson by Rembrandt, and the écorché The Horse Rider by Honoré Fragonard are famous examples at the border between medicine, science and art.

Contemporary medical sciences reveal ever more about the complex systems of the human body – but at a barely perceptible level. The (medical) human body today is understood, tested, and treated as a huge system of data, including complex interactions between our genetic material, our environment, and our host of microbial companions.

How do we grab hold of this data? How do we make sense of it and communicate it to others? How do contemporary artists and designers give our ‘data body’ material form through images, sound, and touch? What kind of tools are complex networks science proposing, and what kind of body do they reveal?

The Data Body on the Dissection Table brings together scientists, artists, philosophers, and designers to explore these questions, through roundtable presentations and audience discussion. The event takes place in Medical Museion’s auditorium – the Danish Royal Academy of Surgeons’ former anatomical theater.

Speakers include Albert-László Barabási, Distinguished Professor and Director of Northeastern University Center for Complex Network Research, Boston; François-Joseph Lapointe, Professor at the Biological Sciences Department, University of Montreal and Artist; Annamaria Carusi, Associate Professor in Philosophy of Medical Science and Technology at the University of Copenhagen and Jamie Allen, Artist and Head of Research at CIID/Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design.

The event is co-organised by Leonardo/Olats and Medical Museion under the EU Studiolab framework, and in conjunction with the Leonardo Day « Arts, Humanities and Complex Networks » satellite event for NetSci 2103.

Attendance is free within the seat limits, refreshments provided.

Registration: http://medm.us/databody

Date: Tuesday, June 4th 2013 – Time: 6:30 – 9 pm

Venue: Medical Museion, Bredgade 62 DK-1260 Copenhagen K

Relevant web sites

Leonardo/Olats (for detailed programme)

Medical Museion, Copenhagen

Arts, Humanities and Complex Networks 2013

Arts, Humanities and Complex Networks e-Book and web companion

StudioLab

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