Where: Lobby, Building 20
Description
KAUST Live consists of a 20 minute live interview and a 10 minute Q&A with the audience livestreamed at KAUST's Facebook page. The speaker will have a chance to talk about his topic in a more personal way. The interview will also be available on YouTube. Don't miss your chance to ask your questions!
About this interview
Artist Rachel Sussman has spent over a decade creating and portraying the dynamic relationships with personal and cosmic time. During her lecture, Rachel will discuss several of her projects including(Selected) History of the Spacetime Continuum, Cosmic Microwave Mandala, and Sidewalk Kintsukuroi. From 2004 to 2014, Rachel worked on one of her larger projects, Oldest Living Things on Earth, culminating in years of research, working with biologists, and traveling all over the world to photograph continuously living organisms 2,000 years old and older. The work spans disciplines, continents, and millennia: it’s part art and part science, has an innate environmentalism, and is driven by existential inquiry.
Rachel Sussman
Rachel Sussman is a contemporary artist based in Brooklyn. She is a Guggenheim, NYFA, and MacDowell colony fellow, and two-time ted speaker. Her critically acclaimed, decade-long project "the oldest living things in the world" combines art, science, and philosophy into a traveling exhibition and New York Times bestselling book. In 2014, she began developing new installation work deepening her explorations of personal and cosmic time, the universe, nature, philosophy, and beauty. With the support of the Lacma lab, and working with Spacex, NASA, and CERN, her new work can be found at MASS MoCa, the new museum Los Gatos, and the Des Moines Art Center. She is currently an artist in residency with the SETI institute. Her exhibition record spans more than a decade in museums and galleries in the US, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
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