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Tuesday, April 29, 2025 |
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Art & Science of Brain Function is Focus of Collaborative Dialogue/Discussion |
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Deborah Aschheim, "Earworm (Node)," 2008, LEDs, plastic, speakers, music, copper. Photo by Mike Venso/ Laumeier Sculpture Park.
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ST. LOUIS, MO.-Artist Deborah Aschheim, known for her focus on interactive multi-sensory responses to neuroscience, memory and cognition, joins Washington University faculty from art, medicine, psychology and neuroscience for a free public panel discussion examining the relationship between Aschheim's art and brain science at 6:00 p.m. March 20 in Room 110, January Hall.
The dialogue, held in conjunction with a St. Louis exhibition of Aschheim's work at Laumeier Sculpture Park , will be moderated by Jeff Zacks, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology in Arts & Sciences and director of the University's Dynamic Cognition Laboratory. Other university participants include Ken Botnick, professor of visual communications in the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts; Pascal Boyer, the Luce Professor of Individual and Collective Memory in Arts & Sciences; and Marcus Raichle, M.D., professor of radiology, of neurology and of neurobiology in the School of Medicine, of psychology in Arts & Sciences and of biomedical engineering in the School of Engineering. The program is funded by Laumeier Sculpture Park, the Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology (PNP) program in Arts & Sciences and the McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience at Washington University.
Aschheim's art, influenced by family experience with Alzheimer's and other memory-loss diseases, is on display through May 11 at Laumeier Sculpture Park , 12580 Rott Road in St. Louis County , near Interstate 44 and Lindbergh Boulevard . The "Deborah Aschheim: Reconsider," exhibition explores why we remember what we see and hear and why we forget, while offering a solution to curb the "forgetting curve."
Described as "an intensely immersive sensory experience," Aschheim's "Reconsider" exhibit includes a refined version of her six-part series of neural network installations. Among new work in the exhibition is a site-specific memory web, an expansive network of audio-video elements that integrate songs created in collaboration with musician Lisa Mezzacappa. Linked by LED light nodes and colored plastic fibers, the installation winds through the museum galleries. Aschheim also has recreated an outdoor work, Arborization a network-based sculpture making a visual connection between the microscopic systems of the body, the electrical networks of the city and the branching patterns of the living trees supporting it. Additionally, a gallery is filled with video, drawings and ephemera from many of the artists perception experiments.
More information about the exhibition is available on the Parks website at www.laumeier.org.
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