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Nanoart

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Examining art that intersects with science and seeks to make visible what cannot ordinarily be seen with the naked eye, Nanoart provides thorough insight into new understandings of materiality and ...
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  • 15 May 2013
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Nano is Greek for dwarf and the word nanotechnology ‘was first proposed in the early seventies by a Japanese engineer, Norio Taniguchi, implying a new technology that went beyond controlling materials and engineering on the micrometer scale that dominated the 20th Century’. The content for this book has been based on a self-emergent process. It explores an art historical understanding of matter and uses various hypotheses to elucidate the effects on materiality and agency as a result of the emergence of nanotechnology. The blurring of material boundaries are reflected in the establishment of a fluid organic spatial narrative in which to place ideas, propositions and concerns. A cornerstone of the book is the concept posed in the philosophical writings of Lucretius of the unpredictability of the atoms’ swerve and its formative role in the beginning of all matter, form, life and individuality. It focusses on the concepts of vibration, vitalism, life and materiality and extends the artist’s concepts of agency in relation to matter.

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Price: £52.95
Pages: 144
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 15 May 2013
Trim Size: 9.00 X 7.00 in
ISBN: 9781841507088
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / General, Nanotechnology, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Power Resources / General, The Arts: techniques and principles

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Foreword by Edward Colless 

Introduction

Chapter 1: Materiality and Immateriality of Art in the Age of Nanotechnology

Chapter 2: From Seeing to Touching: From the Invisible to the Visible

Chapter 3: Nanotechnology, Vibration and Vitalism

Chapter 4: Matter, Measurement and Light 

Chapter 5: Transvitalism and Nature