While physicists attempt to understand the universe in their own way, Christian Gonzenbach draws on his experience as an artist-in-residence in the lab of Martin Pohl (University of Geneva, CERN) to do so with experiments and sculptures using objects from everyday life.
Bio
Christian Gonzenbach
Christian Gonzenbach is an experimenter and an explorer at the edge between the normal and the bizarre. It is the unexpected, the little weird thing, that the artist focuses on. Hence, he has created installations in which a landscape is made out of corn flakes, a video in which all the people are pickles that play soccer, go for a dance or a boxing match, etc. His works look familiar but always disorient the viewer.
Martin Pohl
Martin Pohl is an experimental physicist who has worked on major particle physics experiments at particle accelerators for 35 years, exploring the structure of matter, elementary forces, space, and time. He also contributes to space-borne experiments measuring cosmic particles to investigate their nature as well as their sources.
He is interested in the contributions of science to culture and its interaction with other cultural activities. "A major point of contact between fundamental physics and the arts ought to be that neither scientists not artists should ever expect anything but the unexpected," he says.
International scientific organization established for collaborative research into subnuclear physics. Headquartered in Geneva, CERN includes extensive facilities at sites on both sides of the Swiss-French border. The results of its experimental and theoretical work are made generally available. It was established in part in order to reclaim European physicists who had emigrated to the U.S. as a result of World War II. In 2000 it had 20 European member nations and several nations with observer status.
I do wish there were more people like you around on the interwebs. Not many people are careful with their words, including myself sometimes. My spouse and i constantly come across a new challenge & diverse in this blog. livraison gratuite pixmania
How about adding a dash of "emergence" to the palette?
In my view there wasn't just one Big Bang, but multiple Bangs as a result of self-organizing dark matter that result in an emergent Bang. This multi Bang theory can explain several aspects including the Horizon problem, and obviates the need for Hyper Inflation as well as Dark Energy.