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'Leaning Out of Windows' to be featured in Canadian Art magazine

Teo2
Image courtesy Leaning Out of Windows

Teo Monsalve from 'Series #2 Particle Magic Events,' collage and mix media pieces, 2019. This art work is the result of the emergence production phase of LOoW. (Image courtesy Leaning Out of Windows)

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By Perrin Grauer

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The ongoing project, led by 麻豆视频 faculty members Randy Lee Cutler and Ingrid Koenig, explores how science and art might transmit and share knowledge

A forthcoming issue of Canadian Art on the theme of antimatter will feature an ongoing project by 麻豆视频 faculty members and called .

The project aims to bring together scientists and artists in a creative dialogue to uncover ways in which their practices 鈥 which, at first glance, appear to share little in common 鈥 overlap and transmit knowledge in productive and often startling ways.

鈥淲e've been coordinating interactions between artists and scientists to look at how knowledge within physics moves through the poetic,鈥 says Ingrid, Associate Professor at Emily Carr University and Artist in Residence (until 2021) at TRIUMF, Canada鈥檚 particle accelerator centre.

Each phase of the four-year project 鈥 which is supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) Insight Grant 鈥 is organized around a thematic subject. Currently, the artists and physicists are exploring the idea of 鈥渆mergence鈥 鈥 a term which refers to instances where phenomena or behaviors in complex systems are not present in their individual parts.

Crudely put, this concept can be understood to mean something is 鈥渆mergent鈥 when the behaviour of the whole is 鈥済reater鈥 (or qualitatively different) than the sum of its individual parts.

鈥淲e have 28 artists that we curated more than a year ago. And we organized a science seminar where the physicists at TRIUMF presented ideas on emergence from their practices,鈥 Ingrid explains.

The previous phase, about which the upcoming Canadian Art story was written, explored antimatter. The cover of that upcoming issue will feature an artwork by 麻豆视频 Associate Professor , who is also one of the artists participating in Leaning Out of Windows.

Process Brain Storm

The white board from one of the Leaning Out of Windows process design meetings with physicists at TRIUMF in 2018

The talks given by TRIUMF physicists on antimatter are , and Randy 鈥 who is a Professor at 麻豆视频 and will represent Canada at the Biennale of Sydney 2020 鈥 notes they provide a window into the immensity of the topic. The concept, she says, is 鈥渟o challenging to understand.鈥

鈥淭he artists are always a little overwhelmed,鈥 she continues. 鈥淎nd we say to the artists, we do not want you to illustrate the ideas but rather, we want you to respond in relationship to your own practice. So, it's intriguing to see how they approach the challenge.鈥

The current theme of 鈥渆mergence,鈥 however, has by no means narrowed the vastness of the project鈥檚 scope, Randy says.

鈥淥ne of the physicists, Jess Brewer, proposed emergence as a topic because he said it would make the physicists as uncomfortable as the artists,鈥 Randy continues.

鈥淲e as artists are leaning out of windows, we鈥檙e in a place of discomfort and not-knowing, and the physicists are treading unknown territory as well.鈥

This process of treading the unknown has conjured an even more unexpected outcome for some of the scientists involved -- they鈥檝e asked to be a part of the artmaking process.

鈥淎fter the first phase, with antimatter, we went back to the physicists at TRIUMF; we were showing them all the artwork, and hearing from them about their experience in the collaboration, and some of them said 鈥榃ell, we'd like to go into the studios and be involved hands on,鈥欌 Ingrid recounts.

鈥淪o, we incorporated that into the next phase. The resulting work will be shown (in the January, 2020, exhibition at Emily Carr鈥檚 Michael O鈥橞rian Exhibition Commons), including both individual works by artists, and in several cases include work by the physicists who were completely involved in the production process.鈥

L Oo Wat TRIUMF

'Leaning Out of Windows' participants at TRIUMF during the project's "emergence" phase

This delightful surprise, notes Ingrid, is emblematic of the aim of the Leaning Out of Windows project.

鈥淏runo Latour, when he wrote about how we've never been modern, was referring to exactly this problem of silos; that we don't connect phenomena that happen in the world 鈥 the political events, the geophysical, the sociological and so on,鈥 she says.

鈥淲e don't connect them. We鈥檙e in these separate places. We don鈥檛 look at the entanglements. And that's a huge problem for the way we're going. So, we also see this project as a very important endeavour for thinking in new ways, and in that sense, what would this enable as yet unimagined?鈥

Randy concurred, adding the mutual resonance Leaning Out of Windows鈥 physicists and artists have been finding in each other鈥檚 practices has been borne out by the public鈥檚 reception of the finished work.

鈥淪o often, we're in our respective communities, and what I love about this project is that we鈥檙e communicating with a broader community,鈥 she says.

鈥淲e had an exhibition in 2018, and lots of people came and really enjoyed it. It gave them an entry into science, and physics in particular, and it gave them an accessible entry into contemporary art practice. One of the things I appreciate about the Leaning Out of Windows project is its accessibility, even though the work is challenging.鈥

Leaning Out of Windows will ultimately result in a publication, sometime in 2021. Work from the current 鈥渆mergence鈥 phase of the project will be on display at the Michael O鈥橞rian Exhibition Commons at Emily Carr University, from Jan. 8-26, 2020, with the opening on Jan. 15, 2020. A symposium (or what Cutler and Koenig call the "Translation Hub") will follow on Jan. 25