Friday, 7 April 2017

ART GEM






ART IS




A COSMOS FOR ITSELF











Arts Cosmos







September 02, 2017







The cosmos within arts has the capability to expand its horizon and doing this expansion it presents many different spheres of intellectual and visual inspirations. The cosmos within arts has the tendency in an appropriate conditions to establish many affiliations with science and technology.



The cosmos within Arts is going to merge with the 21th century science and technology. At TED 2002, Mae Jemison, a doctor, dancer, and the first African American woman in space, said, "The difference between science and the arts is not that they are different sides of the same coin… or even different parts of the same continuum, but rather, they are manifestations of the same thing. The arts and sciences are avatars of human creativity."[1]



On August 22, 2012, Steven Ross writes that despite the profound connection between art and science, art programs across the nation are on the chopping block.[1]


The author continues: "In June, the U.S. House of Representatives proposed significant funding cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts." [1]


The same source adds the following points in his article that schools nationwide are eschewing art programs to instead focus on teach-to-the-test courses catered to math and reading. The problem here is that a narrow focus on testing reinforces narrow-minded thinking. Young Americans are being educated out of creativity.[1]



A lecture by Robert Eskridge titled “Exploration and the Cosmos: The Consilience of Science and Art” notes that science and art naturally overlap.[2]

The same expert goes on further and says both are a means of investigation. Both involve ideas, theories, and hypotheses that are tested in places where mind and hand come together—the laboratory and studio.[1]

Dr. Eskridge describes that artists, like scientists, study—materials, people, culture, history, religion, mythology— and learn to transform information into something else. In ancient Greece, the word for art was techne, from which technique and technology are derived—terms that are aptly applied to both scientific and artistic practices.[2]




The Art and
Science of Creativity
- [English]:
Tom Kelley at TEDxTokyo







On July 11, 2013, John Maeda published an article entitled "Artists and Scientists: More Alike Than Different" in which he notes that in DaVinci’s time when expertise in art and science had not yet matured to the polarized state in which they exist today, they coexisted naturally. Of course, science’s level of sophistication back then was quite different.[3]


The author Mr. Maeda continues: "Artists and designers are the ones who help bring humanity front and center, make us care, and create answers that resonate with our values." [3]



The cosmos within arts implies that arts and many interdisciplinary fields in the world of science are intrinsically linked. What is called the art of science today is a reflection of the reality of this cosmos within arts.

"Space art" (also "astronomical art") is the term for a genre of modern artistic expression that strives to show the wonders of the Universe.[4]

This space art lies within the cosmos within arts. The space art is an integral part of the multi-facets and complex cosmos within arts. Space Art is the International Association of Astronomical Artists (IAAA). Composed of over 120 members, artists of the IAAA depict the wonders of the Universe in ways to inspire the greater human population and raise awareness of space.[4]


Space artists may work closely with space scientists and engineers to help them to visualize and develop their scientific and technological concepts of making the dream of space exploration a reality.[4]


Carl Sagan says: “Every one of us is, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another.” [5]






Integration of Art
and Science
| Yoko Shimizu
| TEDxTokyo




John Lubbock in his work "The Pleasures of Life " says: “Art is unquestionably one of the purest and highest elements in human happiness. It trains the mind through the eye, and the eye through the mind. As the sun colors flowers, so does art color life.” [6]

Ray Bradbury in his work entitled "The Martian Chronicles " says: “Science is no more than an investigation of a miracle we can never explain, and art is an interpretation of that miracle.”[7]

There is no excuse to neglect the importance of the cosmos within arts. We need to bloom our talents within this cosmos. This approach gives us all chances for achieving our goals.

 Yes, this is a reality: Art is a cosmos for itself.  There are all sorts of  attraction  and  beauty  within its amazing mystery and the cosmos within arts is concerned to its affiliations with science and technology.





Connecting Art,
Science
and Technology:
Jeff Hazelton
at TEDxSarasota







Scientists VS Artists



How Artists &
Scientists Collaborate



Artist talks
about meeting of
Art and Science
in creation of
Arboretum Sundial



Philippe Dinkel:
The Conjunction of
Art and Science



Creativity in Art,
Creativity in Science
- By Professor
Arthur I Miller



When science meets art
| Fabian Oefner
| TEDxWarwick



Space and place -
art as
a transformative experience:
Duane Hoover
at TEDxTexasTechUniversity



When Artists meet Scientists:
The Imaginerium of Technology
| Barmak Heshmat
| TEDxLA



The Science of Art



The scientist
is an artist:
Floris Visser
at TEDxDelft



Being an Artist
and a Scientist:
John Cannon
at TEDxCarletonCollege



Scientists try to be Artists.
Finland 2017





Artists and Scientists.wmv



































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































[1]
From STEM to STEAM:
Science and Art
Go Hand-in-Hand


[2]
A lecture
by Robert Eskridge
titled “Exploration
and the Cosmos


[3]
Artists
and Scientists:
More Alike
Than Different


[4]
Space art


[5]
Carl Sagan


[6]
John Lubbock


[7]
Ray Bradbury