Semiconductor

Beekeepers working at Goonhilly Earth Station, 2017

Image: courtesy Semiconductor

Artist duo Semiconductor, Ruth Jarman and Joseph Gerhardt, work at the intersection of art and science. Over the past two decades they have become known for an innovative body of moving image work that explores the material nature of our world, how we experience it through the lens of science and technology, and how we create an understanding of it.

Formed in 1997, Semiconductor have won awards and prestigious fellowships including: Samsung Art + Prize 2012 for new media, Smithsonian Artists Research Fellowship, and a NASA Space Sciences Fellowship. Exhibitions and screenings include Let There Be Light, House of Electronic Arts, Basel (solo show); Worlds in the Making, FACT, Liverpool (solo show); Da Vinci: Shaping the Future, ArtScience Museum, Singapore; Field Conditions, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Earth; Art of a Changing World, Royal Academy of Arts, London; International Film Festival Rotterdam; New York Film Festival; Sundance Film Festival and European Media Art Festival. Their first public sculpture Cosmos was unveiled in October 2014, commissioned by Jerwood Open Forest. They live and work in Brighton.

Groundwork commissioned Semiconductor to make a new moving image work based on a series of research visits to Goonhilly Earth Station. Their new film, titled As the World Turns, is a science fiction, which questions how we experience nature through the language of science and technology. The work combines video footage filmed at Goonhilly Earth Station and scientific data acquired through the process of radio astronomy. 

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