Structural Intuitions: Seeing Shapes in Art and Science: A lecture by Martin Kemp


 Art History     Nov 3 2016 | 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM Humanities Gateway 1030

Martin Kemp
Professor of Art History, University of Oxford

Professor Martin Kemp from the University of Oxford is a world-renowned Renaissance art specialist.

"All great achievements of science must start from intuitive knowledge," wrote Albert Einstein. In Structural Intuitions, a fascinating exploration of the commonalities between two seemingly disparate realms, renowned art historian Martin Kemp applies Einstein's notion both to science and to art.

Kemp argues that in both fields, work begins at the intuitive level, curiosity aroused by our recognition of patterns or order. Kemp's "structural intuitions," then, are the ways we engage fundamental perceptual and cognitive mechanisms to bring order to our observed world. Through stimulating juxtaposition, Kemp considers connections between naturally occurring patterns, cognitive processes, and artistic and scientific expression, drawing on an array of examples from the Renaissance through the present.

Taking a broadly historical approach, Kemp examines forms and processes such as the geometry of Platonic solids, the dynamics of growth, and the patterns of fluids in motion, while placing the work of contemporary artists, engineers, and scientists in dialogue with that of visionaries such as Leonardo da Vinci and D'Arcy Thompson.

Martin Kemp is Emeritus Professor of the History of Art at the University of Oxford and the author of Seen/Unseen, Leonardo, and Christ to Coke.

This event is co-sponsored by the Laguna Art Museum, UCI’s Department of Art History, and the Claire Trevor School of the Arts.