Synopses & Reviews
Never has the spirit of innovation been more highly valued than today. Around the world, people see the hard-to-teach skills of creativity as the lifeblood of cultural change and the engine of economic development. In The Lab, David Edwards presents a blueprint for revitalizing labs with "artscience"? creative thought that erases conventional boundaries between art and science?to produce innovations that otherwise might never see the light of day. At the heart of The Lab is "cultural incubation," whereby ideas translate with free-wheeling public exchange through a kind of innovation funnel--from educational settings (as in The Lab at Harvard University), to cultural settings (as at Le Laboratoire in Paris and elsewhere), to realizations as innovative products or humanitarian initiatives (within LaboGroup and other translation labs around the globe). With examples ranging from breathable chocolate (Le Whif) to contemporary art installations that explore the neuroscience of fear, Edwards shows how a measured-risk, seed-investment, mentorship-focused network of labs can allow exotic, unexpected ideas to flourish without being killed off at the first hint of impracticality. Unique to the innovation funnel is how creator risk is encouraged but also managed by mentors and others in each lab, so that the most daring ideas--lighting African villages with microbiotic lamps, or cleaning the air with plant-based filters--can emerge within passionate and sometimes inexperienced creative bands. Lively and engaging, replete with anecdotes that bring Edwards's unique personal experience in developing artscience labs to life, The Lab approaches innovation from exciting new angles, finding invigorating ways to repurpose our most creative assets--in scientific exploration, artistic imagination, and business model-building. David Edwards teaches at Harvard University in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. His creative work is described at www.davidideas.com.
Review
The Lab exactingly and enjoyably describes the process of building a "funnel shaped" institution devoted to process--the node of a network that ceaselessly promotes innovation by finding the common thread that links artist and scientist when they're truly creative (as in this book). Jay Cantor, Author Of On Giving Birth To One ' s Own Mother: Essays On Art And Society
Review
The Lab is a wise and bracing call to arms, a handbook for channeling our creative selves in the early twenty-first century. For anyone hoping to unleash their inner innovator, David Edwards is essential reading Carl Honor & eacute;, Author Of In Praise Of Slowness And Under Pressure
Review
David Edwards spends his life crossing boundaries. The Lab tells the story of his trailblazing initiatives to cross-pollinate the creative energies of artists and scientists around the world. It is an illuminating and inspiring meditation on the nature of creativity itself, not just in formal labs but in everyday life. --Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator, Architecture and Design, Museum of Modern Art
Review
When artists and scientists come together, cheeks gets rosier, voices go up a few notches, eyes sparkle. They are eager to learn from each other. Just as David Edwards maintains, true innovation can only happen where science and culture intersect, and it is time for this millennial truth to become a pillar of our educational system. Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator, Architecture And Design, Museum Of Modern Art
Review
[Edwards'] enthusiasm is infectious. He comes across as a free-spirited inventor and educator. He is also a pragmatist, conceding that an emphasis on the creative process, and a high tolerance for failure, may make it harder for inventive researchers to achieve financial autonomy. In these austere times, Edwards takes a firm stance on the importance of the imagination. Jascha Hoffman
Review
The Lab has done much to shake up ideas about the science-public nexus. Nature
Synopsis
Six months before opening Le Laboratoire,
David Edwardsvisited Hans Ulrich Obrist, who had co-curated a famous exhibit, Laboratorium, that explored connections between art and science. “Famous, yes,” said Hans, “which I find ironic since almost nobody saw it. You have to be careful getting too near contemporary science.”
But this was precisely where David Edwards chose to be. His book, The Lab, promotes surprising innovations in culture, industry, and society by exploring new ideas in the arts and design at the frontiers of science. In The Lab Edwards argues for a new kind of educational art lab based on a contemporary science lab model—the “artscience lab.” With examples ranging from breathable chocolate to contemporary art installations that explore the neuroscience of fear, he shows how students learn by translating ideas alongside experienced creators and exhibiting risky experimental processes in gallery settings. Idea translation from conception to realization is in turn facilitated by a network of complementary labs whose missions range from education to industrial and humanitarian development.
A manifesto of a new innovation model driven by the arts, this is the first detailed description of an emerging cultural phenomenon in the United States and Europe where artists and scientists collaborate to produce intriguing cultural content and surprising innovations. It also offers a fresh look at the creative process as it applies to experiential education, museum exhibition, and industrial innovation.
About the Author
David Edwardsis founder of <>Le Laboratoire, a new artscience center in Paris, and Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of Biomedical Engineering, <>Harvard University.