Visual Communication

The Silent Scream of Cells / Marianne Lechner, Katharina Mayrhofer, Daniel García González, Clara Gómez Cruz, Miguel Fernández de la Torre - Photo: Marianne Lechner, Katharina Mayrhofer, Daniel García González, Clara Gómez Cruz, Miguel Fernández de la Torre

Collection

Visual Communication

We love to experiment and ask questions. We create visual media to communicate and exchange ideas, thoughts, and emotions. We engage with socially relevant topics—questioning, researching, analyzing, and designing. We advance visual culture, develop new media formats for future forms of communication, and seek ways to translate and visualize complex content.

All Visual Communication artworks this year have been developed as part of the SciArt project ASTER+S, organized by Rocío García Robles (University of Seville), where international artists and students collaborated with neuroscientists to develop artistic responses to scientific research. The process followed the eco-SciArt method, which frames creativity as a natural cycle: Seed—scientific ideas as inspiration; Bloom—artistic concepts formed in a hackathon; Fruit—the final artworks.

Ticket //

FREE / No Ticket

  • Forest Beings

    Barbara von Rechbach (AT), Pablo Ferrería Hijón (ES), Lisa Ehrenstrasser (AT), Cristina Rubio Escudero (ES)

    Forest Beings creates a sensual environment with more-than-human actors to advocate a broader, interconnected understanding of the world that includes humans, animals, plants, technology, and the environment in a forest bath experience.

  • Stochastic Resonance

    Lina Gamler (AT), Emma Silvana Tripaldi (IT), Sabine Wimmer (AT)

    Stochastic Resonance is used to reveal weak signals by adding random data, such as noise. In neuroscience, this raises questions: What if human brains only perceive consciously when a certain level of noise is present?

  • The Silent Scream of Cells

    Marianne Lechner (AT), Katharina Mayrhofer (AT), Daniel García González (ES), Clara Gómez Cruz (ES), Miguel Fernández de la Torre (ES)

    How do mechanical and magnetic forces affect brain cells? How do structure and communication change under stress? This installation translates the delicate interplay of these forces into a dynamic, interactive sculpture.