Art and science as creative catalysts

Science, Art and Science Art collaborations are generally presented and understood in terms of their products. The authors argue that the process of Science Art can be a significant—perhaps the principal—benefit of these collaborations even though the process may be largely invisible to anyone other...

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Autores principales: Gates-Stuart, Eleanor, Nguyen, Chuong, Adcock, Matt, Bradley, Jay, Morell, Matthew, Lovell, David
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: MIT Press 2016
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165203
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author Gates-Stuart, Eleanor
Nguyen, Chuong
Adcock, Matt
Bradley, Jay
Morell, Matthew
Lovell, David
author_browse Adcock, Matt
Bradley, Jay
Gates-Stuart, Eleanor
Lovell, David
Morell, Matthew
Nguyen, Chuong
author_facet Gates-Stuart, Eleanor
Nguyen, Chuong
Adcock, Matt
Bradley, Jay
Morell, Matthew
Lovell, David
author_sort Gates-Stuart, Eleanor
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Science, Art and Science Art collaborations are generally presented and understood in terms of their products. The authors argue that the process of Science Art can be a significant—perhaps the principal—benefit of these collaborations even though the process may be largely invisible to anyone other than the collaborators. Hosting the Centenary of Canberra Science Art Commission at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) has shown the authors that while Science and Art pursue orthogonal dimensions of creativity and innovation, collaborators can combine these directions to access new areas of imagination and ideas.
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spelling CGSpace1652032025-12-08T09:54:28Z Art and science as creative catalysts Gates-Stuart, Eleanor Nguyen, Chuong Adcock, Matt Bradley, Jay Morell, Matthew Lovell, David Science, Art and Science Art collaborations are generally presented and understood in terms of their products. The authors argue that the process of Science Art can be a significant—perhaps the principal—benefit of these collaborations even though the process may be largely invisible to anyone other than the collaborators. Hosting the Centenary of Canberra Science Art Commission at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) has shown the authors that while Science and Art pursue orthogonal dimensions of creativity and innovation, collaborators can combine these directions to access new areas of imagination and ideas. 2016-10 2024-12-19T12:54:49Z 2024-12-19T12:54:49Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165203 en MIT Press Gates-Stuart, Eleanor; Nguyen, Chuong; Adcock, Matt; Bradley, Jay; Morell, Matthew and Lovell, David. 2016. Art and science as creative catalysts. Leonardo, Volume 49 no. 5 p. 452-453
spellingShingle Gates-Stuart, Eleanor
Nguyen, Chuong
Adcock, Matt
Bradley, Jay
Morell, Matthew
Lovell, David
Art and science as creative catalysts
title Art and science as creative catalysts
title_full Art and science as creative catalysts
title_fullStr Art and science as creative catalysts
title_full_unstemmed Art and science as creative catalysts
title_short Art and science as creative catalysts
title_sort art and science as creative catalysts
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/165203
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