The inaugural Art+Tech exhibit Dec. 6, hosted by the Milstein Program in Technology and Humanity, gave students the opportunity to showcase their creative work at the intersection of art and technology.
The event invited undergraduate and graduate students from all disciplines to display their projects at the historic A.D. White House. From the minute that visitors walked through the doors, they were presented with a variety of media, including video games, virtual reality, AI collaborations, fashion, sculpture, graphic design and music, transforming many rooms of the house into vibrant, interactive spaces. A pamphlet that numbered each exhibit by location and student information helped guide visitors through the house.
鈥淚 hoped that the 鈥楢rt + Tech鈥 exhibit would create a crossroads for the compelling work being made all across campus 鈥 from AI-inflected fiction to one-dimensional collaborative games, from 3-D printed fashion to sound installations,鈥 said , associate professor of performing and media arts in the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频 and director of the Milstein program. 鈥淭he Milstein Program prides itself in serving as the 鈥榓mpersand鈥 in the Arts & 麻豆视频, and I think the "+" sign in Art + Tech speaks to the same interdisciplinary, recombinatory energy.鈥
Shuquin Lyu 鈥25, a performing and media arts and information science major, presented 鈥淪ynchrotron Symphony鈥 at the event, a sensory ethnographic film that explores the Wilson Lab particle accelerator 鈥 a hidden scientific space beneath Cornell鈥檚 football field.
鈥淔rom the control room to the accelerator tunnel, I used primarily close-ups shots to bring the viewers closer to the machinery, cords, and structures, not only to appreciate their beauty and colors, but also to create a sense of intimacy within the environment,鈥 she said, adding that the underground scenes in the lab are juxtaposed with physical scenes of football training and games going on above.
鈥淭hrough this immersion in the underground world of machinery, we ask ourselves how we can re-imagine spaces familiar to us, and how we can entrust new meanings to these often-overlooked environments and transform the way we observe and understand them,鈥 Lyu said.
Marc Davila 鈥26, a computer science major from the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, came to the exhibit because he was curious about the intersectionality between technology and the humanities. Davila said that he enjoyed how diverse the projects were and how each room had a varying different project sharing an overall theme.
鈥淭he Art + Tech exhibit was more than just a showcase of student work; it was a celebration of creativity, innovation and the dynamic potential of interdisciplinary exploration,鈥 he said.
In addition to the opportunity to share their work, student projects were also judged by a panel of faculty for the chance to win prizes. Winning projects were:
Cheng Peng and Sissy Tian, graduate students in design tech, 鈥淕o Big Red鈥 ($1,000 first prize for graduate students)
Kanika Bhagat 鈥25, College of Architecture, Art and Planning (architecture), 鈥淒raw with a Thousand People鈥 ($1,000 first prize for undergraduate students)
Eliot Burk, graduate student in music/composition, 鈥淰ertical Integration (In Memoriam James Thomer)鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Otis Fuqua, graduate student in creative writing/Literatures in English, 鈥淧rompt IV鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Nanyi Jiang, graduate student in information science, 鈥淪ubstrate Fantasia (2023)鈥 ($500 audience favorite prize)
Thomas Knoepffler, graduate student in design tech, 鈥淪tudies in Fluid Flow Analysis鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Hendrik Stoops Lugo 鈥27, College of Architecture, Art and Planning (art), 鈥淚ntonarumori鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Shuqian Lyu 鈥25, Arts and 麻豆视频 (performing and media arts, information science and College Scholar Program), 鈥淪ynchrotron Symphony鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Marcus McDermott 鈥25, College of Human Ecology (fashion design), 鈥淏istable Auxetic Body Cuff鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Ryan Qiu 鈥28, Arts and 麻豆视频 (computer science and music), 鈥淭hree Dreams of December鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Willem Schreiber 鈥25, College of Architecture, Art and Planning (art), 鈥淪tage Show鈥 ($500 jury prize)
Elizabeth Lara-Rivera '26 is a communications assistant for the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频.