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A visual artist wielding more than a hammer

Aalto University鈥檚 fifth Artist in Residence Matthew C. Wilson explores the entangled nature of ideas.
Aalto artist-in-residence Matthew Wilson
Artist in residence Matthew C. Wilson thinks science and culture are involved in the same processes of imagining and transforming. Photo: Mikko Raskinen

Science and culture work together to imagine the future, says Artist in Residence Matthew C. Wilson. He refers to director Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 consultations with artificial intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky, held in order to develop HAL 9000, the infamous AI character in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

鈥淣ow we talk to Siriand Alexa, but we needed the film to prepare us for their arrival.鈥

Wilson appreciates the fact that Aalto University places art alongside science and other forms of research, adding

鈥淚f we somehow detach our tools from their specific discipline, we can discover new uses for them.鈥

Complex problems, different perspectives

According to Wilson, artistic research and practice are as significant as scientific work, but employ different methodologies and sensibilities towards different outcomes.

鈥淚f all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. With more tools, you might approach and solve problems differently. Addressing complex problems鈥攍ike those we face today鈥攔equires not one tool, but a toolkit.鈥

Wilson鈥檚 current research includes 鈥渇uture imaginaries鈥濃攃ollective image pools, ideas, institutions, and ideologies that transform the world.

鈥淭he future always springs from history. We live in a world that was once only imaginary. In the process of realising images of the future, there are always unintended consequences. Art and culture address those consequences, before and after they appear鈥攂ridging histories and futures. Science and culture are involved in the same processes of imagining and transforming.鈥

Do we underuse our ability to imagine?

Wilson agrees that science needs methods and structures, but believes there are moments when limitations and boundaries are reached. He ponders the history of non-analytical techniques for engaging with these boundaries.

鈥淭here is a long list of scientists and innovators whose 鈥榓ha鈥 or 鈥榚ureka鈥 moments do not come exclusively from analytical processes鈥攖hese range from Friedrich Kekul茅鈥檚 claim that a dream of a snake biting its own tail provided insight into the structure of benzene to Alfred Russel Wallace who, independently of Darwin, conceived of evolution by natural selection during a malarial fever.鈥

Wilson also wonders about the present and future potential of mental states where hitherto unknown objects, images, and processes can be brought into focus.

鈥淲e commonly think moments of insight result from background mental processes, but actually, active foregrounding of the scenario, simulating and modelling capacities of the mind, can be integral to grasping complex phenomena and elusive forms.鈥

Wilson describes how the inventor Thomas Edison 鈥渧isualised the future鈥 by holding steel balls in his hands that would drop if he fell asleep, awakening him just in time to catch insights from hypnagogia鈥攖he state on the edge of sleep.

Experimental processes causing tension

Formerly both a computer engineering and literature student, and now turned artist Wilson has a longstanding engagement with discourses and methods outside art.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in anthropology and its method of participant observation鈥攖his idea that you can be in multiple positions or roles at a time, which need not negate each other even if those experiences are irreconcilable.鈥

When starting a dialogue or collaboration with scientists or researches from different fields, Wilson wants to understand not only the materials and methods of their work, but also the motivation behind it. Asked about his own motivation, Wilson said,

鈥淚t鈥檚 a common idea that art is supposed to make your life better, bring beauty or enjoyment. This can be true, but harmony is often found by first making ourselves uncomfortable and uncertain, by struggling to re-evaluate existing perceptions. I produce work that invites this process.鈥

Matthew C. Wilson holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from Columbia University. He is a visual artist who makes videos and sculptures exploring natural, historical, economic, and perceptual processes. As Aalto University鈥檚 artistin residence, he will develop an artistic project in the schools of Chemical Engineering and Science and give lectures in the University-wide Art Studies minor.

Aalto University鈥檚 Artist-in-Residence Program produces artworks stemming from a dialogue between art and science. During this residence, the artist will pursue her or his own creative project while at the same time engaging with the Aalto community in various ways. The outcome of the residence period will be premiered in the Helsinki region. The program, established in 2011, has welcomed altogether five artists to date.

Text: Tiina Toivola

Photo: Mikko Raskinen

Artist-in-Residence Programme

The Aalto AiR programme follows the practices of the best international universities and is, notably, the first of its kind in the Nordic countries.

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