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  2. Environmental art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_art

    Environmental art is a range of artistic practices encompassing both historical approaches to nature in art and more recent ecological and politically motivated types of works. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Environmental art has evolved away from formal concerns, for example monumental earthworks using earth as a sculptural material , towards a deeper ...

  3. Lumen Naturae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumen_Naturae

    Lumen Naturae: Visions of the Abstract in Art and Mathematics is a book on connections between contemporary art, on the one hand, and mathematics and theoretical physics, on the other. It is written by Matilde Marcolli , and published by the MIT Press in 2020.

  4. Hybrid art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_art

    Hybrid art is a contemporary art movement in which artists work with frontier areas of science and emerging technologies. Artists work with fields such as biology, robotics, physical sciences, experimental interface technologies (such as speech, gesture, face recognition ), artificial intelligence, and information visualization.

  5. Contemporary art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contemporary_art

    Contemporary art is part of a cultural dialogue that concerns larger contextual frameworks such as personal and cultural identity, family, community, and nationality. In English, modern and contemporary are synonyms, resulting in some conflation and confusion of the terms modern art and contemporary art by non-specialists. [1]

  6. Ecological art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_art

    Ecological art is an art genre and artistic practice that seeks to preserve, remediate and/or vitalize the life forms, resources and ecology of Earth. Ecological art practitioners do this by applying the principles of ecosystems to living species and their habitats throughout the lithosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and hydrosphere, including wilderness, rural, suburban and urban locations.

  7. The arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_arts

    By definition, the arts themselves are open to being continually redefined. The practice of modern art, for example, is a testament to the shifting boundaries, improvisation and experimentation, reflexive nature, and self-criticism or questioning that art and its conditions of production, reception, and possibility can undergo.

  8. Bioart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BioArt

    The scope of bioart is a range considered by some artists to be strictly limited to "living forms", while other artists include art that uses the imagery of contemporary medicine and biological research, or require that it address a controversy or blind spot posed by the very character of the life sciences.

  9. Organic Abstraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organic_abstraction

    Organic Abstraction is an artistic style characterized by "the use of rounded or wavy abstract forms based on what one finds in nature." [1] It takes its cues from rhythmic forms found in nature, both small scale, as in the structures of small-growth leaves and stems, and grand, as in the shapes of the universe that are revealed by astronomy and physics. [2]