Interdisciplinary studio brings together artists from across fields
At the Harvard metaLAB, a design studio and creative research lab affiliated with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society, projects come together as digital art installations in venues such as the Harvard Art Museums. Documentary media is one metaLAB métier, with works such as “Cold Storage,” a database-driven film about the Harvard Library’s depository, made by faculty director Jeffrey Schnapp and metaLAB principal Cristoforo Magliozzi. Other projects take shape as software, such as “Curarium,” a platform for exploring and visualizing art collections to search and discover patterns in visual culture, right in the Web browser.
Whatever the project, metaLAB infuses it with tinkering, inquiry, and whimsy. Tape and scissors combine with laser cutting in folded, hand-stitched books; JavaScript brings data to life in shipping containers, galleries, and library reading rooms. This hybridity reflects the group’s many connections across the University and beyond. It’s a hopeful mission for the future of the arts and humanities: interdisciplinary work as play.
He just needs to pass the bar now. But blue-collar Conor’s life spirals after a tangled affair at old-money seaside enclave in Teddy Wayne’s literary thriller
Altered states of consciousness through yoga, mindfulness more common than thought and mostly beneficial, study finds — though clinicians ill-equipped to help those who struggle