Josèfa Ntjam, Myceaqua Vitae, 2020, video with sound, and Organic Nebula, 2019, carpet, photomontage. Collection of the artist. Collection of the artist. Installation view from Drift: Art and Dark Matter at Agnes Etherington Art Centre. Photo: Paul Litherland.

Join the Art Museum for a panel discussion on the interdisciplinary potentials of astrophysics and art, featuring University of Toronto astrophysicists Renée Hložek, Miriam Diamond, and David Curtin alongside Queen’s University cultural studies scholar Elvira Hufschmid.

Bridging art and science or, indeed, identifying their existing entanglement is no new feat, as any early modern polymath would tell you—yet disciplinary boundaries can still prove difficult to cross, and what such crossings might offer isn’t always readily apparent. Drift: Art and Dark Matter proposes the potentials of collaboration between astrophysicists and artists; itself like a laboratory, the exhibition offers us a site of experiment in which to explore what an expanded perspective might disclose about our universe, and about us, at large. If, after all, dark matter poses a fundamentally sensory problem—evading our comprehension as it escapes our perception—perhaps we could approach it with aesthetic—sensory—solutions.

Pursuing Drift's avenues of inquiry by drawing on their own research and experiences across the arts and sciences, Hložek, Diamond, Curtin, and Hufschmid consider the possibilities and implications of Drift’s interdisciplinary undertaking.

We invite your participation in a Q&A period concluding the event.

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  • Date: Wed, Sep 21, 2022
  • Time & Duration: 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm (EST) (2h)
  • Venue: Online – Zoom
  • Note: Zoom webinar links will be emailed to all registrants in advance of the event.
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