When:
Wednesday, Nov 09, 2022 5:30p -
6:45p

Where:
MIT Samberg Conference Center
50 Memorial Drive
Cambridge, MA 02142

EventScheduled OfflineEventAttendanceMode

Admission:
FREE

Hosted by:
joyraft.host61243 Kate

Categories:
Lectures & Conferences

Event website:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/regenerative-futures-at-the-crossroad-of-art-science-and-technology-tickets-429311972667

This year, the MIT Press and Leonardo, the International Society for the Arts, Sciences, and Technology, celebrate 30 years of collaboration. Join Diana Ayton-Shenker, Nick Lindsay, and Roger Malina-as we celebrate this partnership with a conversation on the legacy, history, and future of Leonardo. We will discuss the ideas we thought would be impactful that turned out not to be, the ideas that we rejected that ended up exceeding all expectations, and what we see coming for Leonardo over the next few decades.


Fearlessly pioneering since 1968, Leonardo serves as THE community forging a transdisciplinary network to convene, research, collaborate, and disseminate best practices at the nexus of arts, science and technology worldwide. Leonardo serves a network of transdisciplinary scholars, artists, scientists, technologists and thinkers, who experiment with cutting-edge, new approaches, practices, systems and solutions to tackle the most complex challenges facing humanity today.


About the speakers:


Diana Ayton-Shenker serves as CEO, Leonardo/ISAST (International Society of Arts, Science, Technology); Executive Director, Leonardo-ASU Initiative; and ASU Professor of Practice. Diana has published four books, including, A New Global Agenda, and Tumbalalaika: A Collection of Poems; and produced New Babel, a 10-story tall A.R. public art installation (Union Square Park, NYC) collaborating with The New School XReality Center and artist William T. Ayton, her partner-husband of 30 years.


Nick Lindsay has worked for the MIT Press since 2008 where he leads both the journals division and the Press’ open access efforts. He’s focused on developing new titles and business models to support the Press and has worked extensively with scholarly societies, university departments, and others on innovative journal projects, including Rapid Reviews: COVID-19.


Roger Malina is a physicist, astronomer, Executive Editor of Leonardo Publications at MIT Press, distinguished professor at UT Dallas and Associate Director of Arts and Technology. His work focuses on connections among digital technology, science and art. He is Associate Director of the ATEC Program at The University of Texas at Dallas.


Accessibility: Our events are enriched by your presence and we are committed to making them accessible. Please email us at [email protected] to request accommodations.



Share this event

Add to:

Reddit
11/09/2022 17:30:00 11/09/2022 18:45:00 America/New_York Regenerative Futures at the Crossroad of Art, Science, and Technology <p>This year, <a href="https://mitpress.mit.edu/">the MIT Press </a>and <a href="https://leonardo.info/about">Leonardo, the International Society for the Arts, Sciences, and Technology,</a> celebra... MIT Samberg Conference Center, Cambridge, MA 02142 false MM/DD/YYYY