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Fulcrum Arts Presents:
The Laboratory for Embodied Intelligences (LEI) at Sleepless: The Music Center After Hours
July 27, 11pm-3am
The Dorothy Chandler Music Center, Los Angeles


More Info Here
Tickets on sale beginning 7/23

LEI Credits and Thanks Here

Microcosmos: Intelligence After Hours

The Laboratory for Embodied Intelligences, led by artists Nina Waisman and Flora Wiegmann, and featuring the magical vocalist Carmina Escobar, our wonderful dancers - Hyosun Choi, Madison Clark, Kearian Giertz, Colleen Hendricks, Sarah Jacobs and Samantha Mohr, and unearthly video by Drew Hetizler, will present a series of multimedia performances throughout the evening. Look for the performers just inside the entrance, moving up the central stairway, and launching off from tthe third floorlanding.

These performances demonstrate parallels between human and microbial movement and behavior; one result of an extensive process of research, interviews with scientists at NASA, USC, Stanford, Harvard, NYU, and Waisman's yearlong artist residency at SETI Institute.

About The Laboratory for Embodied Intelligences
The Laboratory for Embodied Intelligence is a collective of artists, scientists and other experts working to create experiences that allow humans to “try on” non-human perspectives, in order to learn from other species. LEI's approach is to collaborate with diverse community partners, incorporating a a range of mind-body perspectives. Using scientific findings about non-human creatures to (playfully and easily) tune human bodies into newly sensitive perception-machines, LEI aims to gain knowledge unavailable through classic scientific data analysis. LEI’s approach is supported by numerous interdisciplinary experts.

About Fulcrum Arts
Fulcrum Arts empowers artists to invent, inspire, and provoke. Fulcrum Arts' A×S (Art x Science) initiative embodies the integration of intuition and reason and further commemorates, in Pasadena, a textured conversation between the sciences and the humanities that has long been emblematic of the city’s history, and is equally fused with its future.

Why explore microbial behaviors?
Read the conceptual and scientific overview here.

The fields of neuroscience and cognitive science have found that simply watching another body move triggers neurons in the viewer's brain to fire as if she, too, were doing the same movement. At the same time, unconsciously, the viewers muscles are primed to execute those motions. Watching others move, then, leads us to unconscioulsy play or try on their movement on our own bodies. This leads not only to learning, but also to bodily understandings of the viewed expereience - a deep alignment, and often an empathy with those viewed.

Through these performances, LEI seeks to give the public access to some of the vast treasure of behaviors and communication techniques invented and enacted by microbes. What can we learn from the highly successful behaviors and communication methods our microbial colleagues and ancestors employ? How do human logics and languages compare to microbial behaviors?

Generously supported to date by:
The Music Center / Los Angeles County, Fulcrum Arts, Goldenvoice, The 18th Street Arts Center, The Hammer Museum, SETI Institute Artist in Residence Program, and The Lucas Artists Residency Program at Montalvo Arts Center .

The Laboratory for Embodied Intelligences (LEI)
Director/Co-Founter: Nina Waisman
Movement expert/Co-Founder: Flora Wiegmann

Music Center Collaborators and Performers:
Vocalist: Carmina Escobar
Video:Drew Heitzler
Costumes: Milan DelVecchio
Dancer-collaborators: Hyosun Choi, Madison Clark, Kearian Giertz, Colleen Hendricks, Sarah Jacobs, Samantha Mohr.

Thanks
Huge thanks to the generous supporters named below, as well as those listed here!!!

The Music Center / Los Angeles County
Sleepless: The Music Center After Hours is graciously made possible by Ring-Miscikowski Foundation/The Ring Foundation and The James Irvine Foundation. The Music Center strives to deepen the cultural life of every resident of Los Angeles County and continue creating an increasingly relevant, multidisciplinary performing arts center.

Goldenvoice
Fulcrum Arts
Fulcrum Arts empowers artists to invent, inspire, and provoke. Fulcrum Arts' A×S (Art x Science) initiative embodies the integration of intuition and reason and further commemorates, in Pasadena, a textured conversation between the sciences and the humanities that has long been emblematic of the city’s history, and is equally fused with its future.

Goldenvoice
Goldenvoice creates and operates music festivals including coachella valley music, arts festival, and stagecoach..

18th Street Arts Center
Nina Waisman’s residency and its associated collaborative public events and performances are made possible by The 18th Street Arts Center, with funding provided by City of Santa Monica Cultural Affairs Department, the California Arts Council, and The James Irvine Foundation. 18th Street Art Center is the leading artist residency in Southern California, with a mission is to provoke public dialogue through contemporary art making.

The Hammer Museum
The Hammer Museum’s Public Engagement program is supported, in part, by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission. In Real Life: Studio is a Public Engagement project organized by January Parkos Arnall, curatorial associate, Public Engagement.

SETI Institute’s Artist in Residence Program
The SETI Artist in Residence Program facilitates cross-disciplinary artistic expression dedicated to exploring, understanding, and explaining the origin, nature and prevalence of life in the universe. The Program fosters an exchange of ideas between artists and scientists, and encourages contemporary artistic practices that allow us to experience life on this planet and beyond in new ways. Learn more about the SETI Artist in Residence Program, here.

SETI Institute
SETI Institute’s mission is to explore, understand, and explain the origin and nature of life in the universe, and to apply the knowledge gained to inspire and guide present and future generations. SETI has a passion for discovery, and for sharing knowledge as scientific ambassadors to the public, the press, and the government. SETI Institute is a private, nonprofit organization dedicated to scientific research, education and public outreach. The Institute comprises three centers, the Center for SETI Research, the Carl Sagan Center for the Study of Life in the Universe and the Center for Education and Public Outreach. Founded in November 1984, SETI Institute began operations on February 1, 1985. Today it employs over 130 scientists, educators and support staff. Research at the Institute is anchored by three centers, the Center for SETI Research, the Center for Education and Public Outreach and the Carl Sagan Center for the study of life in the universe. More information here.

Montalvo Art Center and Residency Program
The Sally and Don Lucas Artists Residency Program (LAP) is designed to offer artists from a range of disciplines an environment conducive to individual and collaborative creative practice. Seeking to stimulate an energetic exchange of ideas between culturally diverse Fellows and across varied artistic fields and scholarly disciplines, the residency has earned international recognition as a model of curato   rial practice supporting the development of new and challenging contemporary work.

The LAP welcomes sixty artists a year into the program. Residencies are offered in all contemporary artistic disciplines including the visual arts, design, literary arts, film, choreography, performance art, music and composition, and teaching artists. The LAP welcomes artist’s collaborators from overlapping fields, including science, technology, and other scholarly research. The Program is the first in the United States to offer an annual Culinary Artist Residency. For more information about Montalvo Arts Center, click here.

Bios
Nina Waisman, Director
As a former dancer turned multi-media artist, Nina Waisman is fascinated by the critical roles that movement and sensation play in forming thought. Her interactive sound installations, videos and collaborative performances highlight the subliminal training and possible hacking of such embodied thinking. These works focus on related issues including surveillance, invisible labor, machine-human feedback loops, nanotechnology. Venues include House of World Cultures, Berlin; LAXART; CECUT, Tijuana; OCMA; the Beall Center for Art & Technology, Zero1 Biennial, the San Diego Museum of Art, The New Children's Museum in San Diego. She has taught at institutions such as Cal Arts, SFAI, UCSD, and spent 2015 as an artist in residence at SETI Institute. Waisman is starting a new series of collaborative artworks exploring the role of embodiment in forming non-human intelligences, ranging from microbial on through plant, animal and extraterrestrial intelligences. More info: http://www.ninawaisman.net

Flora Wiegmann, Founding Member, Movement Expert Flora Wiegmann is a Los Angeles-based dancer and choreographer.  She works in both live performance and film, often making research-based work that is specific to its particular site. She has had the opportunity to collaborate with artists such as Fritz Haeg, Silke Otto-Knapp, Alix Lambert, Amy Granat, Miljohn Ruperto, Nina Waisman and Tom Lawson. Her projects have been presented at the ICA, Philadelphia; The Kitchen, New York; the California Biennial and LAXART in California, The David Roberts Foundation and The Camden Arts Centre, London; The Banff Center for Creativity in Canada, and Université Rennes in France. More info: http://florawiegmann.com

 
Pictured: Hyosun Choi, Madison Clark, Carmina Escobar, Kearian Giertz, Sarah Jacobs, Samantha Mohr. Photo: Robert Crouch
 
Pictured: Carmina Escobar. Photo: Robert Crouch
 
Pictured: Hyosun Choi, Madison Clark, Carmina Escobar, Kearian Giertz, Sarah Jacobs, Samantha Mohr. Photo: Robert Crouch