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Event 3: Revisiting the Campus Walk

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For my third event, I decided to revisit the walking activity from South to North campus that we conducted in week 1 after learning so much more about the intersection between science and art over the past 10 weeks. As a senior, this also served as a period for me to deeply reflect on my time and experience here at UCLA as I walked completely across and around campus. As a statistics major, most of my time was spent in the Boelter and Mathematical Sciences building. Something that I learned this quarter during my research of art on campus is that the flooring of Boelter Hall spells out "Lo and Behold" in binary code, a tribute to the history of the building being the birthplace of the internet.  As I walked through central campus into North campus, I am forced to reflect on the atrocities that took place on our campus a few weeks prior. To be completely honest, watching the encampment was like art to me; the idea of community coming together in the form of physical demonstrat...

Week 9: Space & Art

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As I don't have much of an interest in space, this week's lecture material was a way for me to discover why artists enjoy space and why it is often such a popular center for art, especially in more contemporary pieces. The introduction of space as an art form, much like nanotechnology, can be traced back to ancient times. More specifically, Roman art depicts discoveries of planets and the Sun as the center of the universe. However, these artworks were highly controversial due to conflicting views with the church, which dictated daily life, beliefs, and ultimately art during this time. Moving on to more contemporary art, I took away from this week's lectures that space is highly influential in art, particularly because of all the phenomena that are considered highly abstract. Additionally, the concept of stars, planets, and other occurrences in the skies and space are ones with great color and texture, creating a highly inviting selection of source material for art. Addition...

Week 8: NanoTech & Art

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Nanotechnology can best be described as involving which structures, devices, and systems with novel properties and functions due to the arrangement of their atoms on the 1–100 nm scale. After viewing this week's materials, I found myself most fascinated by the concept of nanoparticles in art, primarily in ancient art. It gives an understanding that although there was no research done on it at the time, these concepts still existed in early art forms.  Much of early art features nanoparticles to enhance color and other visuals, especially in artwork like ceramics and dishes. Primarily, nanoparticles were used in glazes to add metallic sparkle; copper and silver nano particles were envisioned in Renaissance era paintings, and the Roman Lycurgus Cup utilized gold nanoparticles to enhance the red color of the goblet. There is much science behind artistic concepts that have existed for centuries, even before there was an explanation or term for the processes used in ancient art.  N...

Event 2: Love Machines (MFA Showcase)

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For my second event, I attended the 2024 MFA exhibition, Love Machines, in New Wight Gallery in the Broad Art Center. It was a gallery showcasing the work of UCLA MFA students focusing around the intersection of technology, machines, and art. There were a few pieces I found fascinating, though the entire exhibition was incredible.  One of the pieces that stood out to me was Grace and I dancing separately together by Wantong Yao. The piece was about how machines learn and unlearn a three-legged race.  The exhibition uses a machine learning technique, reinforcement learning, which  mimics the trial-and-error learning process that humans use to achieve their goals . I was most intrigued by this piece because the idea of using reinforcement learning is almost metaphorical in the sense that the young character in her piece was attempting to detach herself from the older one, which represented people in older generations of her family by unlearning it's previous behaviors....

Week 6: BioTech & Art

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This week's material discusses the intersection between biotechnology and art, primarily the use of health technology, the human body, animals, tissue cultures, and other scientific experimental items in art. One of the artists discussed in the lecture material was Orlan, who was a French artist who became widely known for her series of surgical operations as a form of art expression.  In total, she underwent 9 different surgeries as a part of her art. She coined the term carnal art, or self-portraiture in the classical sense but made by means of today's technology. The disfiguration and then reconfiguration of the human body using surgery and medical technology showcases biotechnology as a form of self expression. Learning about Orlan makes me wonder how her art has blossomed more into a reality in today's society, although maybe not as exaggerated. Plastic surgery has become increasingly more and more normalized, and it made me wonder the purpose of Orlan's work. Prim...

Event 1: Visiting the Getty Museum

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For my first event, I visited the Getty Museum on April 15th, which happened to be College Night at the Getty. In addition to the usual art exhibits available for view at the museum, there were also performances and interactive crafts outside in the garden area. During this event, I looked for ways to connect different showings of the Getty to concepts we have discussed this quarter so far. Here is a photo of me at the Getty with my friends:  One of the performances featured Cherokee EDM (electronic dance music). The performance was a mix of both indigenous cultural music as well as music produced electronically by the soundboard. This performance made me evaluate the art and science intersection expressed in EDM-- electronic music is only made possible by advancements in sound technology and engineering. The EDM performance were original compositions, which reminded me that for many, music is a way to mix modernity with tradition.  The history of EDM originates from the mid-1...

Week 4: MedTech & Art

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In this week's lectures and readings, we discussed the intersection between medical breakthroughs and technologies and art. Inventions in the medical world have both played a role in shaping art, both through practical breakthroughs that allow for accurate depictions of the human body and by also assisting in defining the beauty standard over time through plastic surgery and other cosmetic procedures.  In the lectures, the concept of medical illustrations was heavily discussed. Henry Gray was a massive playmaker in spearheading human anatomy illustrations alongside his friend Henry Carter. The impact of the use of cadavers and medical illustrations is tenfold as it enables medical students and other people in the medical profession to accurate explore, study, and understand the human body without the added risk of live patients. This way, every move in a procedure or a treatment can be carefully calculated.  In term s of medical technology, it was discussed in the video lectur...