Research project | COST Action
Computation, Hybrid Practices and CultureArtistic intelligence refers to the collective capacity of artistic and practice-based research to generate impact and value beyond the project-specific, singular outcomes of an individual project. This COST Action explores value propositions based on the data, information and knowledge that emerge from the relationships between artistic research projects, research practices, and research cultures that are usually excluded from or ignored by conventional evaluation schemes.
Artistic and practice-based research is increasingly called upon to enable cross-disciplinary research to address complex societal challenges in collaborative ways. However, most of this research is currently conducted in isolation from the work of related or relevant researchers who have already addressed similar questions or come to different conclusions – let alone the potential for linkages with other forms of scientific research.
As a result, even new projects tend to de-prioritise referencing, contextualising their sources and referring to a state-of-the-art that might even include results from other disciplines. On the other hand, the methods and results of research are difficult to trace and access for anyone who has not been involved in the process.
The Action responds to the lack of common standards, challenging isolated, non-referenced research processes across the arts and culture. It aims to link emerging initiatives in practice-based research by exploring current technological possibilities for accessing, linking and validating them within a common framework of artistic intelligence.
Read the Memorandum of Understanding for the implementation of the COST Action ARTinRARE.
Action Chair
Paulo Luís Almeida
Management Committee
Alessandro Rancati (Croatia), Altin Idrizi (Albania), Andrea Guidi (Italy), Andris Teikmanis (Latvia), Angela Bartram (United Kingdom), Balázs Kicsiny (Hungary), Bart Geerts (Belgium), Casper Schipper (Netherlands), Catalin Gheorghe (Romania), Catherine Mulligan (United Kingdom), Claire Gauzente (France), Eirikur Smari Sigurdarson (Iceland), Ellen Røed (Sweden), Eyal Eckhaus (Israel), Florian Schneider (Ireland), Franco Ripa di Meana (Italy), Georg Russegger (Austria), Giaco Schiesser (Switzerland), Goce Nanevski (North Macedonia), Helga Ingimundardóttir (Iceland), Holga Méndez Fernández (Spain), Ines Schaber (Germany), James Mackay (Cyprus), Jan Piechota (Poland), Johan Arnt Haarberg (Switzerland), Joseph Lockwood (Spain), Kenan Zekic (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Kristina Gumulak Rypakova (Slovakia), Luísa Ribas (Portugal), Mara Ratiu (Romania), Marinos Koutsomichalis (Cyprus), Marta Materska-Samek (Poland), Martynas Petrikas (Lithuania), Mat Gregory (Sweden), Michael Lazar (Israel), Michaela Glanz (Austria), Natasha Sarafova (North Macedonia), Nuala Hunt (Ireland), Runa Hestad Jenssen (Norway), Soenke Zehle (Germany), Tero Heikkinen (Finland), Trond Lossius (Norway), Vytautas Michelkevicius (Lithuania), Zoran Pantelic (Serbia)