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Micro Talk :: ANAT Synapse Residency 2022

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Micro Talk :: ANAT Synapse Residency Program 2022

Join us for a short, lunch-time conversation featuring the artists and researchers currently undertaking the 2022 ANAT Synapse Residency program. Our speakers are:

Dr Anna Madeleine Raupach + Dr Brad Tucker (ACT) 
Mt Stromlo Observatory, The Australian National University

Dr Steph Hutchison + Prof. Jonathan Roberts (Qld)
Australian Cobotics Centre, The Queensland University of Technology

Guest Host & ANAT Alumnus, Dr Leah Barclay (Qld)
Creative Industries, University of the Sunshine Coast 

WHEN: 12 - 12.45pm ACDT / 12.30 - 1.15pm AEDT, 8 December 2022

WHERE: Join us online.  A zoom link will be emailed to registrants prior to the event.


Do you have a burning question for our speakers?

Micro Talk will be kept short and sweet to fit within your lunch break - it will not be interactive. We’ll be taking pre-submitted questions.

SUBMIT YOUR QUESTION HERE by 9am, 8 December 2022

Dr Anna Madeleine Raupach, ANU

Hosted by the ANU Research School of Astrophysics and Astronomy (RSAA) at Mount Stromlo Observatory, this project combines creative practice with methods of observational astronomy to investigate the growing impacts and potential mitigation strategies of human-caused space pollution.

Anna Madeleine Raupach is a multidisciplinary artist based on Ngunnawal and Ngambri land, Canberra. Her current practice includes AR, moving image, drawing, textiles and installation, to express alternative forms of temporality and mapping, and to consider how technology shapes our interpretation of the natural world in the context of climate change.

Read Anna’s Synapse Residency creative research journal HERE

Dr Brad Tucker, ANU

Brad Tucker is an astrophysicist and cosmologist, and is currently a Fellow at the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Mt. Stromlo Observatory at the Australian National University. His areas of interest include asteroids, comets, black holes, meteors, space junk, supernova, and big bangs.

Dr Steph Hutchison, QUT

Steph Hutchison collaborates with Jonathan Roberts at the Advanced Robotics and Manufacturing Hub and Australian Cobotics Centre to research how humans can predict the movement of robots, using dance improvisation and choreographic methodologies.

Steph is an artist-researcher, choreographer, performer, and teaching-artist. She has a rich dance practice as a solo choreographer/performer and collaborator within dance and technology contexts. As a dance artist, Steph creates and performs primarily improvised solo dance works that focus on extreme physicality and endurance of the human body, or engage a dialogue with digital technologies and systems.

Read Steph’s Synapse creative research journal  HERE

Prof Jonathan Roberts, QUT

Jonathan Roberts is a Professor in Robotics at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and is a Chief Investigator at the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision (ACRV). He is part of the School of Electrical Engineer and Robotics. His main research interests are in the areas of Field Robotics, Medical Robotics, Performance Robotics and Design Robotics.

Dr Leah Barclay, guest host and ANAT Alumnus

Dr Leah Barclay is an Australian sound artist, designer and researcher who works at the intersection of art, science and technology. Over the last decade, Leah’s research and creative work has investigated innovative approaches to recording and disseminating the soundscapes of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems to inform conservation, scientific research and public engagement. Her work explores ways we can use creativity, new technologies and emerging science to reconnect communities to the environment and inspire climate action. 

Residency Program Overview

ANAT Synapse involves Australian research organisations hosting artists in residence, leading to profound artistic and professional development for the participants, while also building a sustainable support base for interdisciplinary creative collaboration in Australia. 

ANAT Synapse brings artists and researchers together in partnerships that generate new knowledge, ideas and processes beneficial beyond both fields. A distinguishing feature of the residencies is their creative research focus, with applicants supported in collaborative experimentation. 

ANAT welcomes submissions from artists who work in any genre with conceptual aims that  intersect with science and/or technology. You can review the work of past program recipients, here.

Residencies take place over 16 weeks full-time or the equivalent part-time, with ANAT paying participating artists a fee and contributing towards project material costs, accommodation expenses and return travel to the destination of the residency. The host organisation provides in-kind access to staff expertise, space, equipment and resources, and assists with disseminating outcomes at the conclusion of the residency. 

The call for applications to the ANAT Synapse 2023 Residency program is now open. Visit our website for more information.

Accessibility

This Zoom event will include auto-generated live captioning. We encourage you to advise ANAT of any further accessibility requirements when registering for your ticket. ANAT will endeavour to do all we can to make the event accessible for you.

Micro Talk will be recorded and the live transcription saved. It will be posted on the ANAT website at a later date.

About ANAT

ANAT is a national network that creates opportunities for experimental artists to collaborate with science and technology partners. We do this because we believe artists are essential to how we imagine and shape our future.

ANAT is assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, the South Australian Government through Arts SA and through the Visual Arts and Craft Strategy, an initiative of Federal and State Governments. The ANAT Synapse Residency program is supported by the Copyright Agency’s Cultural Fund, which supports Australia’s writers, artists, publishers and arts organisations.

Images clockwise from top left: Dr Steph Hutchison (with John McCormick and Adam Nash, Eve of Dust); Prof. Jonathan Roberts; Dr Leah Barclay (Listening in the Wild Recording, photograph Tricia King); Dr Brad Tucker; Dr Anna Madeleine Raupach (photograph Saul Stead, AGSA). 


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