Cybernetic Serendipity Redux–online discussion

Monday, August 25th, 2008

40 years ago, Jasia Reichart’s exhibition “Cybernetic Serendipity” showed that the interactive confluence of cybernetics, computing and art had
arrived. (60 years ago, Norbert Wiener published his book “Cybernetics”. 50 years ago the worlds first electronic performance installation–the Philips Pavilion at the Brussels World Fair–was launched.)

40 years later, while computers and art remain, cybernetics has nearly vanished, although there is a reviving interest in it in art.

In remembering Cybernetic Serendipity we have the chance to re-open the debate, to reconsider the relationship particularly between cybernetics and art, and to do so taking into account the way that cybernetics has developed during its period of near invisibility. Thus, we can revisit and reconsider: if Cybernetic Serendipity were to be launched today, what should go in it, how should it be exhibited, and what would cybernetics and art learn from each other?

That, of course, depends not only on developments in art practice, but also (and more critically) on what is new in cybernetics, and how can that inform art: and, what is new in art, and how can that inform cybernetics.

This is a chance to reopen the connection, to explore again, and to move beyond some of the current models taken from cognitive science, computing, AI and AL, and complexity, to the (much more radical) field of their origin, cybernetics.

The immediate celebration will be an online discussion, Cybernetic Serendipity Redux, considering art, exhibitions and cybernetics now. This
will run during September. There is a small team of discussants, to keep the ball rolling, but I hope you’ll join in as much as you can. You can find this at: http://www.media.uoa.gr/yasmin/index.php?yasminText=discussions-schedule

There is also a ning site, where we will store material: http://cyberdesign.ning.com/ flo

Quelle
DESIGN RESEARCH NEWS Volume 13 Number 8 Aug 2008 ISSN 1473-3862
DRS Digital Newsletter http://www.designresearchsociety.org

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