There will be a continuation of the Dark Matter breakdancing performance for the first time in Washington D.C., September 11 at The David C. Driskell Center at University of Maryland, and September 12th at The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.
Upcoming catalogue to be released, Fall of 2015.
Featured on the cover and examined in the last chapter, Pinder’s work plays an important role in this thoughtful and groundbreaking academic text.
The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself.
—Carl Sagan
Cosmosis is an exhibition that investigates how the cosmos and the scientific fields of physics and cosmology continue to inspire artistic production, exerting great influence on our understanding of the universe—and our place therein. After all, scientific developments and breakthroughs inevitably have great cultural relevance and ramifications, often contributing to our sense of identity and role both as individuals and collectively within society. As is often the case: to look outward and beyond is also to look inward.
This exhibition brings together a group of artists whose interest in the cultural significance of the cosmos leads in multiple directions, intersecting with the fields of aesthetics, anthropology, philosophy, and so on, grounded in different art-making strategies and material explorations.