| Talk About Imagination 
 Physicist and Artist Probe the “Brilliant Bridge” Between Two Disciplines
  IT’S NOT EVERY DAY that a professor of physics and a
              professor of art undertake a joint project.
             
 
The teamwork of ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ scientist Stamatis Vokos
            and artist Laura Lasworth began in early 2003, when they pored over
            photographs of sculptures by Tim Hawkinson and Tom Friedman. Vokos
            observed that the sculptors celebrate properties of physics when
            precisely fitting together their work.
                |  
  Lit
                  by their slide presentation, professors Lasworth and Vokos
                  discuss the art and physics of sculpture, such as Friedman’s “Memory
                  of a Piece of Paper” (shown). 
 
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 Says Vokos, “People think
            scientific discovery is something that builds on reason. But there
            is a moment of intuition when the mind is not reasoning; the mind
            just knows. The mystery is, how do scientists and artists translate
            these eternal truths for the rest of us? Where do they get this imagination?”
 
 Talk
            about imagination! Even in their playful names, Hawkinson’s “Dorito
            Polyhedron” and “Spoon Ball” hint of new geometric forms that common
            materials can take. One of Friedman’s untitled sculptures — a long, crooked
            pencil made with real pencil sections
— hangs from the ceiling, the point of the pencil just touching the floor. Another
Friedman sculpture, a prickly sphere made of thousands of glued toothpicks, shows
in its mock explosion “the direction of force from a single point,” according
to Vokos.
 
 Lasworth remembers, “When Stamatis got to the pages in the Friedman
book with the balancing pencil and exploding toothpick sculptures, it was natural
for him to give me a basic lesson in physics. We talked about how in both art
and science the element of mystery enters into the process of imagination.”
 
 For
Vokos, Friedman’s “Memory of a Piece of Paper” created what he calls “a brilliant
bridge” between art and science. “You’re looking at a black, rectangular spot,” explains
Vokos, “and you have little torn pieces of paper around that central spot. Where
that empty spot is, there used to be a piece of paper. From a physicist’s point
of view, this is what we do: We smash particles against each other to reconstruct
a story of what happened in the beginning.”
 
 It was not the first time Lasworth
had taken a personal interest in physics. “Many years ago,” she says, “I wanted
to understand Einstein’s Theory of Relativity, so I could try to depict motion
in some paintings.”
 
 Lasworth and Vokos developed these ideas in a team-taught
workshop during the Day of Common Learning, where the Seattle Pacific community
celebrated imagination and curiosity. Students, staff and faculty colleagues,
including Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Bruce Congdon, were inspired
by the scientist-artist partnership. Says Congdon, “I’m excited about the possibilities
of placing disparate departments like physics and art together and seeing what
creative collaborations — like this one — come out of it.”
 
  — BY MARGARET D. SMITH— PHOTO BY DANIEL SHEEHAN
 
 
 
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