Pattern and Chaos in Art, Science and Everyday Life: Critical Intersections and Creative Practice

Author:   Sarah Horton (Norwich University of the Arts, UK) ,  Victoria Mitchell (Norwich University of the Arts, UK)
Publisher:   Intellect Books
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781789387803


Pages:   374
Publication Date:   08 December 2023
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Pattern and Chaos in Art, Science and Everyday Life: Critical Intersections and Creative Practice


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Author:   Sarah Horton (Norwich University of the Arts, UK) ,  Victoria Mitchell (Norwich University of the Arts, UK)
Publisher:   Intellect Books
Imprint:   Intellect Books
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781789387803


ISBN 10:   1789387809
Pages:   374
Publication Date:   08 December 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements List of Figures Introduction Sarah Horton and Victoria Mitchell   PART 1: PATTERN DYNAMICS Introduction The Anxious Spiral Krzysztof Fijalkowski Representing Kinematics and Dynamics by Pattern-Breaking in Nature, Art and Music Brian Whalley and J. Harry Whalley Drawing Dynamic Patterns: The Protein Maze Gemma Anderson, Jonathan Phillips and John Dupré The Metamorphogram: Pattern as Memory of Experience Alun Kirby Crumpling: An Exploration of Nature Dewi Brunet and Gwenaël Prost, for the CRIMP Ccollective Somewhere Between Weaving and Painting Geoff Diego Litherland (with Angharad McLaren) Knotting Across Species: Creating Order from Chaos Eleanor Morgan Simplifying Complexity: The Visual Language of Neuroscience Gill Brown   PART 2: MORPH, FLUX, MUTATE Introduction Unrepeating-Repeat Danica Maier Pattern Evolution Kate Farley Geomorphology: Mapping the Land, Above and Below Water Glyn Brewerton Flux Katy Hammond Drawing Fire David Griffin Imago Images Robert Hillier The Chaos of Delight: Spatial and Temporal Interruptions Lesley Halliwell   PART 3: DECOMPOSE–-RECOMPOSE Introduction Foment Catherine Yass Meniscus James Quinn Digital Dadaism Chris Brown Forty-Four Sounds Mark Graver A Type of Chaos Pauline Clancy Fragile Order Charlotte Hodes Shatter Zoë Hillyard The Moments I am Looking For… Judith Stewart Expanded Visuality: Photography as a Patterning Mechanism for the Animated Form Katarina Andjelkovic   PART 4: VIRUS Introduction Global Ghost Map Anne Eggebert Embodied and Coded: Drawings as Viral Systems Daksha Patel Viral Experiments Louise Mackenzie Contagious Pattern: The Spread of Appropriated Patterns by Contemporary Artists Andrew Bracey   PART 5: SOCIAL IMAGINARY Introduction You’ll Never Walk Alone: Aa Song of Community and Struggle 1945–2021 Sarah Lowndes Dialectical Reversal in About Two Worlds David Mabb Distance and Disruption: The Organizsed Disorder of the Body in Illness Catherine Baker Unfolding Thinking: Nanotechnology Meets Fine Art Practice Les Bicknell Instead of the Feeling of Home Townley and Bradby Designing for the Real World: The Importance of Chaos Anthony Hudson Order? Sarah Blair You Guys Are So Stochastic Lucy Ward and Karoline Wiesner Clouds in the Machine Sarah Horton   PART 6 NOTHINGS IN PARTICULAR Introduction The Shape of Dust Doris Rohr Mimesis: Nothings in Particular William Prosser Mottled Geometries: The Lure and Allure of the Pattern in the Carpet Victoria Mitchell Ghost Flower 3 Andrea Stokes Dom Sylvester Houédard: Exhibiting Spiritual Architypestractures and Cosmic Dust Nicola Simpson   Notes on Contributors Bibliography Index

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Author Information

Victoria Mitchell is Research Fellow at Norwich University of the Arts. She has published papers on various aspects of art, design and textile culture, pursuing an interdisciplinary theoretical approach which focuses on material, making, metaphor and meaning, and is co-editor of The Material Culture of Basketry (Bloomsbury, 2020), for which she wrote on pattern in the context of braiding and dancing. Dr Sarah Horton is an artist-researcher whose practice includes sculpture, drawing and painting often resulting in site-specific artwork. Her doctorate ‘Decoration: Disrupting the workplace and challenging the work of art’ indicates an ongoing interest in the way pattern, decoration and ornament is used in fine art and in a wider sense to indicate value and identity.

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