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Chemistry in Art, Art in Chemistry, and the Spiritual Ground They Share

October 14 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm PDT

Free
Roald Hoffman
  • Prof. Roald Hoffmann, Cornell University
  • Sponsored by Stanford Chemistry Department
  • Oct. 14th, 3:00-4:00 pm, Online & in person, Stanford Center for Teaching & Learning, Sapp Center Auditorium 111, Free, Learn more

Abstract

“Chemistry is an essential tool for making art. We will begin by looking at the evolution of pigments for one color, clearly an object of our desire, in the artist’s palette, from the Gate of Ishtar to Prussian blue and modern pigments.  And at photography, a very chemical-enabling tool for artists.

Then we will turn to art in chemistry.  The pages of my articles, those of my colleagues, are filled with drawings of molecules.  From a certain reality, which, like all reali­ties, turns out to be on close examina­tion a representation of one, the creators of these drawings try to abstract the essence.  Significant formal consid­erations—the relationship of the parts of a molecule to its whole—are essential. That sounds pretty close to art.

On to the spiritual ground which an art and a science that has creation at its heart share. Alchemy is one; I will discuss what attracts artists to alchemy, and how alchemical goals resonate in modern chemistry. And then take a wild leap to modern times, by posing a question that at first sight seems absurd: Is there an analogue in science to abstract art?

If abstraction wants to be seen as an alternative to naturalistic representation and the figurative, what can chemistry possibly be against? Nature, of course. With interesting consequences.  Another aspect of abstraction has been the concentration on one or another component of the artistic whole. Issues of form—at the center or the periphery, inclusion or exclusion, see-through or opaque, balance, color—are isolated.  Mark Rothko’s color fields are a fine example of this concentration. We’ll explore chemical analogues of such concentrated isolation, also look at the way modern chemistry gives the aleatory its due. I will work against the caricature of abstract art and science as… cold. In chemistry and art both, we create and discover meaning.”

*Professor Roald Hoffman will be presenting remotely but the event will be in-person at the Sapp Center Auditorium (STLC 111)

About the Speaker:

“Roald Hoffmann was born in 1937 in Złoczów, then Poland. He came to the US in 1949, and has long been at Cornell, active as a theoretical chemist. In chemistry, he has taught his colleagues how to think about electrons influencing structure and reactivity, and won most of the honors of his profession.

Hoffmann is also a writer, carving out his own land between poetry, philosophy, and science. He has published six books of non-fiction, three plays, and seven volumes of poetry, including two book-length selections of his poems in Spanish and Russian translations.”

Details

Date:
October 14
Time:
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm PDT
Cost:
Free
Event Category:
https://chemistry.stanford.edu/events/student-hosted-colloquium-professor-roald-hoffmann-cornell-university

Venue

Hybrid

Organizer

Stanford University
View Organizer Website