Careful Whisper/Heart Science: Anne Pollock & Nina Wakeford with Sue Brain
Join Careful Whisper collaborators in an informal dialogue across art, feminist science and technology studies, and cardiovascular science.
Entry to all exhibitions and events is FREE.
Join Careful Whisper collaborators in an informal dialogue across art, feminist science and technology studies, and cardiovascular science.
Join award winning comic artist Dr Ian Williams in this storytelling workshop to explore, draw and discuss experiences of dementia.
A feminist encounter with cardiovascular science by artist and sociologist Nina Wakeford and King’s Professors Anne Pollock and Susan Brain
An informal lunchtime Q&A with award-winning photographer Allie Crew and Professor Catherine Evans.
Step inside a futuristic Taiwanese night market to explore ideas around ecology and global food production – a world premiere commissioned by LIFT & Taipei Performing Arts Center
Presented as part of Experts by Experience: Who Knows Best? This informal discussion will explore ethical values in everyday life and how we can use this to help improve research ethics.
Join us at Science Gallery London for an informal, drop-in lunchtime Q&A to learn more about the ideas and research behind the exhibition Dementia Journeys: Towards Better End of Life Care
An artist-led workshop exploring the messy realities of AI in the street, and the data infrastructure in which it is now entangled.
A lunchtime talk with Dr Irene Di Giulio, lecturer in anatomy and biomechanics, about her research into the accessibility of spaceflight
Participatory researchers explore the contributions of ‘experts by experience’ – people with lived experience of an issue or system – in the research process.
Photography, comic strips, poems and games reveal the human stories of those who care for loved ones dying with dementia.
Dr Thomas Booth presents some recent breakthroughs in diagnostic AI focused on the field of abnormality detection.
Btihaj Ajana examines the extent to which self-tracking devices and apps can be considered as tools of self-care.
An interactive session with Caitlin Bentley looking at participatory AI design with and for people at risk of marginalisation.
Dr Mercedes Bunz and Eva Jäger present their research for the Creative AI Lab - a collaboration between King’s and the Serpentine Gallery
Dr Gabrielle Samuel questions some of the assumptions associated with AI’s promise to solve some of society’s biggest challenges.
Researchers and research students are invited to learn more about how we devise the programme at Science Gallery London, and the integral place of King's research within it.
Join Elizabeth Black for a conversation about what we need from AI to be able to trust it, and the role the media can play.
To mark World Mental Health Day, Marcus Coates’ film explores lived experience of psychosis - presented in partnership with Artangel and King’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience.
This event has been postponed. We will notify all ticket holders of the rescheduled date in due course.
Co-hosted by anthropologist and educator Dr Zoë Goodman (King’s College London) and Caroline Ngorobi (Jukwaa Arts Productions, Mombassa), this workshop brings together those working at the intersection of arts and health to hold space for contentious conversations.
Join us for Science Gallery London’s next Researcher Open House to find out how you can collaborate with us on our 2024 season programme.
As with all our seasons here at Science Gallery London, the foundation of the 2024 season will be facilitated collaborations between King’s College London researchers, artists and community partners.
These collaborations will form the basis of the new art commissions and events which make up the season exhibition and public programme. Participation in the annual season programme can take different forms; you might form a collaboration with an artist which informs one of the artworks in the exhibition, be part of a talk or event, or your research might be the subject of a stand-alone display.
At our Researcher Open House, you’ll learn more from the Science Gallery London team about the way the 2024 season is being conceived and developed and hear about the different ways in which you can engage and participate. We’ll talk about how we support artist/researcher collaborations, project funding, timelines and key dates.
Regardless of your department or faculty, we'd love to meet you. We are particularly interested in the following research areas: climate change and sustainability, speculative design, systems ecology, risk and resilience, material sciences, engineering/bioengineering, ethics & extractivism, policy and activism, global health and social medicine, economy & growth, psychology and philosophy of transition. We are keen to explore these issues from a range of perspectives, from the hyper-local to the global south.