On Saturday 5th November 2016, AXNS are curated and chaired the panel ''Quantifying Aesthetic Emotions: What are the Implications for the Arts?' at STATE Festival: The Sentimental Machin...
AXNS is pleased to announce we will be collaborating with The London Students’ Neuroscience Network (LSNeuroN) in a symposia focusing on the intersection of art, neuroscience & society as part of the London...
'Indeed we may consider the engine as the material and mechanical representative of analysis.’'
– Ada Lovelace, 'Notes upon L. F. Menabrea's Sketch of the Analytical Engine Invented by Charles Babbage
On the ...
The Lab Project is an experimental month-long exhibition and events programme exploring the interactions between art and science. Over the course of three phases involving collaborations between scientists and ...
Data science is often treated as hard fact whilst art tends to look at the world in shades of grey. In our new project AXNS Collective is exploring how art can inform the way data shapes our lives.
AXNS are ...
On 30th and 31st May, 2015 AXNS Collective presented two events as part of the Southbank Centre's Web We Want Festival.
The festival is inspired by the work of Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide...
From 17th January to 28th February 2015 AXNS presented 'Sculpting Motion: The Fickle Screen', a solo exhibition from Madi Boyd at Gerald Moore Gallery from 17th January to 28th February 2015.
Sculpting Motion...
“All my visions appear to me infinitely more perfect and more organised than anything seen by the mortal eye."
(William Blake)
Blake's visions have long been a topic of debate by scholars, artists and poets; ...
Fractured Visions: To See Again
Kings College London, Guy’s Campus
25th September - 30th October 2014
Fractured Visions was an Augmented Reality installation by artist Tamiko Thiel and psychiatrist Domi...
Can neuroscience teach us anything about the aesthetic experience?
Neuroaesthetics is the study of the neural correlates of beauty; how the brain interests aesthetically pleasing phenomena and how sensory perc...