The exhibit opens Friday, April 30 at the ZKM Karlsruhe in Karlsruhe, Germany. Now, network visualization has also moved into the virtual reality space.īarabási’s work was exhibited at the Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art in Budapest, Hungary from October 2020 to March 2021. Over the years, the language of network visualization has evolved from the original two-dimensional grid-like sketch to become more organic with curved links and then eventually to three-dimensional models both on the computer and printed into sculptures that Barabási and his colleagues could handle. We ended up systematically developing the language of network visualization.” “What we have been doing really over the last 25 years is challenged by the science and motivated by my interest in art. We have done it mostly because it was part of us understanding the system,” says Barabási, director of the Center for Complex Network Research. “Most of the stuff that you see in the exhibit … we haven’t really done it for publication. Photos by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University Here it happened inversely,” says Albert-László Barabási, Robert Gray Dodge professor of network science and distinguished university professor of physics at Northeastern. “In art it is very common that you take ideas from science, shapes from science, and concepts from science and put it into the art space.
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