Exhibition
DARK MATTERS: Unseen & Unknown
05.08.23 02.12.23
Venue
Science Gallery Melbourne
Tags
Art commission, Collaborations
Julijonas Urbonas, WHEN ACCELERATORS TURN INTO SWEATERS, 2016-2022. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Alan Weedon

The exhibition aims to explore the fundamental essence of life and the universe, and how so much of it remains a mystery to us.

DARK MATTERS is a collaboration between Arts at CERN, Science Gallery Melbourne and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Dark Matter Particle Physics.

Deep dive into the unseen, the unknown and the unspoken – will we ever fully understand the forces at play in our own lives, both on an individual level and on a planetary and universal scale? Dark matter consists of a mysterious substance that does not present an interaction with electromagnetic forces, which means it does not absorb, reflect it, or emit light. In an era defined by the power of modelling data, technology and simulations, the search for dark matter can be seen as a symbol of the limits of our cognitive experience – how might it help us imagine new possibilities for life, and our relationships with non-human entities or systems?

Through local and international experimental projects—some developed in conversation with scientists and researchers—we explore life and all the dark matter that flows through it, under it, and collides with it.

Curator/s
Mónica Bello, Head of Arts at CERN and Tilly Boleyn, Head of Curatorial at Science Gallery Melbourne, in collaboration with a curatorial panel of young people.
Yunchul Kim, Chroma V, 2022. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Eugene Hyland
Semiconductor, The View from Nowhere, 2018. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Alan Weedon
Patricia Domínguez, Terrestrial Download, 2022. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Eugene Hyland
Suzanne Treister, Scientific Dreaming, 2022. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne. Photo: Eugene Hyland
Alan Bogana, Ionize, Ionize!, 2020. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Eugene Hyland
Semiconductor, The View from Nowhere, 2018. Installation view, Science Gallery Melbourne, 2023. Photo: Alan Weedon
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Art Commissions (4)
The View from Nowhere
Semiconductor
2018
Scientific Dreaming
Suzanne Treister
2022-2023
Chroma VII
Yunchul Kim
2023
Ionize, Ionize!
Alan Bogana
2020
Links (2)
DARK MATTERS
Science Gallery Melbourne
Arts at CERN collaborates with Science Gallery Melbourne and the ARC Centre for the exhibition “Dark Matters”
CERN
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