Negative Capability: Imaging and Imagining Fundamental Science Through Productive Doubt

2015 
In 1817, English poet John Keats proposed the idea of negative capability as a desirable state of creativity that embraced uncertainty and doubt. Fiona Crisp, an artist and academic, has coopted Keats’s phrase for an ongoing, practice-based research project that uses nondocumentary photography and film to interrogate extremes of visual and imaginative representation in fundamental science. Evolved through contact with a number of organizations, the project, Negative Capability, places artistic production in the spaces where experimental and theoretical science is performed, foregrounding the “site” or laboratory as a social, cultural, and political space where meaning is shaped and constructed rather than received or observed. Historically, Western culture has measured space and time through the body, but the twin extremes of macro- and microscale associated with fundamental physics and astronomy often operate beyond a lay public’s perceptual and cognitive grasp, when, for example, we attempt to approach ...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    4
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []