Network research and network visualization have proved to be one of the most promising scientific methodological innovations in recent years/decades, which seems to be an effective tool for the study of cultural and social phenomena, including the art scene.
The exhibition Hidden Patterns aims to present the last 25 years of research by the BarabásiLab, led by the physicist and network researcher Albert-László Barabási. BarabásiLab is a collaborative environment where scientists from multiple disciplines collaborate with artists and designers (Kim Albrecht, Szu Yu Chen, Alice Grishchenko, Mauro Martino, Edson Pavoni) together advancing the visual vocabulary of networks.
By following the development of network visualization – presenting the main projects of the BarabásiLab – the viewer can finally gain insight into the application of this comprehensive method in art. Using state-of-the-art technology (data sculptures, MI, AR, VR, drawing robot), network diagrams and structures vividly describe the hidden connections and relationships that underlie the studied phenomena.
Barabási’s research focuses on the search for mostly invisible connections between things and phenomena, the exploration of repetitive patterns, which connect nature, society, language and culture. This network approach promises a comprehensive, universal method that can be used to examine almost any context (e.g., the success of artistic careers) with scientific precision.
Plans for the exhibition include the presentation of ongoing research processes and analyses such as the display of the Global Art Network, which depicts the relationships between artists and institutions. Through the use of virtual and real data sculptures and tools based on augmented reality, images projected into space offer new possibilities for visualization for researchers and those interested.
Curator: József Készman
BarabásiLab
Center for Complex Research (CCNR)
The exhibition is organised as part of the CAFe Budapest Contemporary Arts Festival.
Main sponsor: Magyar Telekom
Sponsors and partners:
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Virtual tour in the exhibition BarabásiLab. Hidden patterns
This exhibition is a peculiar being in the life of the Ludwig Museum: a chimera that simultaneously preserves the methods and approaches of several different types of knowledge. It is a mosaic woven of science and art, where some elements of the two media are often interchanged and new shoots are developed, new patterns are created.
The virtual version of the exhibition was created by the professional team of ExhibitOnline.
How does science end up in a museum of contemporary art? online media event
Media event in which we present an unusual exhibition tour, dissecting the connection between art and science with such prominent figures as the Boston-based Hungarian network researcher, Albert-László Barabási the museum director, theoretician and media artist, Peter Weibel and the museum expert, András Szántó.
Hidden Patterns: A Conversation About Networks and Arts 8. April, 2021, 19:00–20:30
Join Serpentine Creative Director Hans Ulrich Obrist, physicist and Director of BarabásiLab Albert-Lászlo Barabási, ideas collective and studio CAMP, and artist Burak Arikan, Ashok Sukumarannal és Shaina Ananddal as they discuss how network effects and big data are poised to shift our understanding of the dynamics of the contemporary art world.