The Arts Catalyst
artscat's Channel
 
 
Hello, you either have JavaScript turned off or an old version of Adobe's Flash Player. Get the latest Flash player.

You must be logged in to view this video.

The following content has been identified by the YouTube community as being potentially offensive or inappropriate. Viewer discretion is advised. Please confirm that you wish to view this video.

This video or group may contain content that is inappropriate for some users, as flagged by YouTube's user community. Please confirm that you wish to view this video.

This video is unavailable.

Escape Vehicle No 6, Simon Faithfull (2004)
Poetic Cosmos of the Breath, Tomas Saraceno (2007)
Malamp UK - Brandon Ballengee (2007)
1st International Artists Airshow
2nd International Artists Airshow
Profile
 
Channel Views:
3,650
Total Upload Views:
17,952
Joined:
August 03, 2008
Last Sign In:
2 months ago
Subscribers:
39
The Arts Catalyst commissions art that experimentally and critically engages with science. We bring together people across the art/science divide and beyond to explore science in its wider social, political and cultural contexts. We produce provocative, playful, risk-taking projects to spark dynamic conversations about our changing world.
Country:
United Kingdom
Subscriptions (2)
Channel Comments
There are no comments for this user.
Recent Activity  
artscat commented on Space Chair Project (2 months ago)
"Not stolen, but not was Simon part of the team as claimed."
 
 
artscat commented on Escape Vehicle No 6, Simon Faithfull (2004) (2 months ago)
"Nope, not til we were sent the youtube link."
 
 
artscat commented on The Making of Space Chair (2 months ago)
""can take something ordinary and make it extraordinary"??

tish tish. Simon's was the extraordinary project."
 
 
artscat commented on Escape Vehicle No 6, Simon Faithfull (2004) (2 months ago)
"Assume you're talking about Toshiba's new ad."
 
 
artscat commented on Escape Vehicle No 6, Simon Faithfull (2004) (2 months ago)
"Call our insurers. (Seriously though, it was incredibly light and the odds were so small that the insurers and the CAA had not problem with it)"