This thesis is a theoretical and practical intervention in the field of art and technology. It
proceeds from the re-examination of four specific domains that in the past 40 years have
considerably informed the invention of new aesthetic forms. They are: art, science, nature
and technology. We have identified that each one of these domains and the way they inform
one another reflects the influence of a Western analytical tradition based on fragmentation,
dichotomies and dualities. In consequence of this, art of the last decades has suffered from
a sort of mechanistic thought which results from a predominantly weary aesthetic model,
founded in dualities such as: object/process, form/behaviour, meaning/information.
The main question that the present study addresses is how to overcome this
predominantly reductionist inheritance and to develop an aesthetic model able to
interconnect in an integrative fashion those disparate domains, respective discourses and
practices? The answer to this question, developed throughout this thesis, is an aesthetic
principle built upon the notions of resonance, coherence and field models, rooted in an
integrative view of living organisms based on the theory of biophotons. This constitutes the
main contribution of the thesis to new knowledge.
The theoretical approach of this thesis is developed upon the revision of the concept
of form, supported by a Gestalt analysis as provided by Rudolf Arnheim, and has involved
the consideration of the ideas of Gilbert Simondon (the concept of "concretisation") and
Vilem Flusser (the concept of "apparatus"), in order to gain a deeper insight into the nature
of technology.
In conclusion, the practice-based methodology of this thesis has been to develop
artworks based on the confluence of living organisms (plants) and artificial systems in
order to permit empirical observation and reflection on the proposed theory. The major
outcome of the practice is the artwork "Breathing", a hybrid creature made of a living
organism (a plant) and an artificial system. The creature responds to its environment
through movement, light and the noise of its mechanical parts and interacts with the
observer through his/her act of breathing. This work is the result of an investigation into
plants as sensitive agents for the creation of art. The intention was to explore new forms of
artistic experience through the dialogue of natural and artificial processes.
Date of Award | 2009 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Art and Technology: coherence, connectedness, and the integrative field
da Nobrega, C. A. M. (Author). 2009
Student thesis: PhD