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Found 57 results for kat austen
Exhibition blurs boundary between you and your objects

Exhibition blurs boundary between you and your objects

12 June 2013

William Blake's death mask (with EEG) next to a Cyberman's head and a gargoyle: a new exhibition crosses the lines between humans and the things we make


The festival year starts here

The festival year starts here

20 May 2013

It's nearly summertime in the northern half of the world – time to find out what the festivals are laying on to entice the rational reveller


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Today on New Scientist: 25 April 2013

25 April 2013

All the latest stories on newscientist.com: urban cool, alien water worlds, how to get online if you can't read or write, the unreal world, and more


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Light Show tricks meaning out of physics and biology

13 March 2013

A new exhibition plays with the physics of light to show just how important it is to our perception of the world


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Mariko Mori: The cosmos in a gallery

9 January 2013

In her new exhibition, Rebirth, Mariko Mori draws inspiration from the sky and ancient cultures to connect us to nature


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The universal art of networking

28 November 2012

Tomás Saraceno's stunning sculptures explore the connections permeating the universe and how our impact on the environment is wider than we think


Antony Gormley: I engineer experience

Antony Gormley: I engineer experience

10 October 2012

Sculptor Antony Gormley explains how his installations explore the way humans act, react and interact


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Art appreciation

25 July 2012

Like Kat Austen, it wasn't until I saw some of Jackson Pollock's works in their original size at the Museum of Modern Art...


Get the picture? Art in the brain of the beholder

Get the picture? Art in the brain of the beholder

11 July 2012

"My child could have done that!" Wrong – neuroaesthetics is starting to show us why abstract art can be so beguiling, says Kat Austen


Ice-age nettles may survive in dark Chinese caves

Ice-age nettles may survive in dark Chinese caves

5 October 2011

Walk into a cave in south-west China and you could be stepping back 30,000 years – they could be a time capsule preserving rare nettles from the last ice age


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