“Questions as Tools in Art, Science and the Humanities” at Stanford

Film Screening
Lecture/Conversation

“Questions as Tools in Art, Science and the Humanities” at Stanford

Still from Questions as Tools with Monika Schleier-Smith, professor of physics at Stanford University

How do questions relate to creativity and purpose? Do artists, scientists, and humanists hold similar or divergent views? A new documentary film, Questions as Tools in Art, Science and the Humanities, offers numerous directions based on interviews with Stanford University–based MacArthur Fellows and MacArthur Fellows who have also been fellows or residents at the American Academy in Rome.

Questions as Tools was directed by Hideo Mabuchi, professor of applied physics at Stanford University, and Peter N. Miller, President of the American Academy in Rome. A thirteen-minute screening of the film will be followed by a Q&A with invited speakers from the film, followed by a reception.

Moderated by Mabuchi and Miller, the Q&A will feature interviewees from the video based at Stanford: Dan Jurafsky, professor of linguistics; Manu Prakash, professor of bioengineering; Monika Schleier-Smith, professor of physics; and Camille Utterback, professor of art and art history.

This event is free and open to the public.

An additional public screenings was held at Cooper Union in New York on December 4, 2024. The next screening will take place at the American Academy in Rome on January 27, 2025. Each event has the same format: a presentation of the shorter version of the film followed by a Q&A with invited speakers.

To watch the film, please visit questions.aarome.org.

Date & time
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
5:00 PM
Location
Stanford University
P. T. McMurtry Building, Oshman Hall
355 Roth Way
Stanford, CA
United States
Event sponsorship

This event is made possible by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the American Academy in Rome, the Stanford Arts Institute, the Department of Art and Art History at Stanford University, and the Office of the Vice President for the Arts at Stanford University. Special thanks to Kurt Hickman and the Cantor Arts Center.