Thursday, March 26, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Science imitating art in the next KPU-Science World Speaker Series talk

Darpan News Desk, 30 Sep, 2016 02:04 PM
    Did Star Trek inspire the iPad? Is Google a real life version of Terminator’s Skynet? The spark of inspiration in the worlds of art and science has always been close, and perhaps no closer than in the past few decades with digital advancements in motion picture and computer modelling.
     
    In the latest installment in the Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) Science World Speaker Series, art historian and KPU instructor Dr. Dorothy Barenscott will examine what artists and filmmakers can teach us about scientific visualization long before a scientific hypothesis or paradigm can be tested and made material. According to Barenscott, artists have become powerful conceptualizers in bridging scientific discovery to the rest of the world.
     
    "Modern artists and filmmakers guide and influence mainstream and even modern scientific perceptions about what the future of invention and ingenuity will quite literally 'look' like,” said Barenscott, whose interdisciplinary research relates to the interplay between urban space, emerging technology, and media forms.
     
    What Can Artists and Filmmakers Teach Us About Scientific Visualization takes place Thursday, Oct. 13, 7 p.m. at Science World Vancouver. Doors open early at 6 p.m. for a workshop to create your own artistic and scientific visualization. The event is free but registration is requested. To register and learn more, visit kpu.ca/scienceworld.
     
    This speaker series is a partnership between KPU and Science World that supports the expansion of science in our communities. This free public series works to engage, entertain and educate guests with fascinating insights into the world of science.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips
    NEW YORK - The potatoes are wrong. The football game's too loud. The kids aren't dressed right. Thanksgiving can, of course, be a great joy, but with so many beloved traditions on the line it can also be prime ground for sniping and griping the first time the torch has been passed.

    Hosting Thanksgiving For The First Time? Some Tips

    How women can get the first date right

    How women can get the first date right
    If you have only talked over the phone, looked at a profile picture or texted each other - he really doesn’t know exactly how you look until you...

    How women can get the first date right

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking
    Teenagers are less likely to drink at parties when they live in communities with particularly strong social host laws, finds a US-based study....

    Strict social hosts help curb underage drinking

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Infants know what your eyes tell
    "Our study provides developmental evidence for the notion that humans possess specific brain processes that allow them to automatically...

    Infants know what your eyes tell

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward
    Scientists have created cells that can detect changes in the brain associated with learning, memory and reward....

    Lab cells reveal how brain responds to memory and reward

    Teenagers' family, school conflicts rub each other

    Teenagers' family, school conflicts rub each other
    If you think that the lives of adolescents at home and at school are quite separate, think again as a study has discovered that conflicts at home...

    Teenagers' family, school conflicts rub each other