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How Artists Improvise and Provoke Robotics

Steve Benford, Rachael Garrett, Eike Schneiders, Paul Tennent, Alan Chamberlain, Juan Pablo Martinez Avila, Patrick Brundell, Simon Castle-Green

Year
2025
Citations
7
Access
Open access

Abstract

Abstract We explore transdisciplinary collaborations between artists and roboticists across a portfolio of artworks. Brendan Walker’s Broncomatic was a breath controlled mechanical rodeo bull ride. Blast Theory’s Cat Royale deployed a robot arm to play with a family of three cats for twelve days. Different Bodies is a prototype improvised dance performance in which dancers with disabilities physically manipulate two mirrored robot arms. We reflect on these to explore how artists shape robotics research through the two key strategies of improvisation and provocation. Artists are skilled at improvising extended robot experiences that surface opportunities for technology-focused design, but which also require researchers to improvise their research processes. Artists may provoke audiences into reflecting on the societal implications of robots, but at the same time challenge the established techno-centric concepts, methods and underlying epistemology of robotics research.

Keywords

Computer scienceRoboticsArtificial intelligenceComputer visionHuman–computer interactionRobot

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