SBCAST
The Santa Barbara Center for Art, Science & Technology (SBCAST) is a live/work arts residency.
The Santa Barbara Center for Art, Science and Technology (SBCAST) supports Artist/Scientist/Technologist collaborations to encourage new fusion models of interaction for design, development and research. SBCAST encourages educational and public outreach components to further public understanding of Art, Science and Technology through a new window provided by their juxtaposition in a creative envir
06/02/2026
UCSB Media Arts and Technology End of Year Show -
1) Elings Hall, UCSB, 6/2, 5pm-8pm
2) SBCAST, 513 Garden St., 6/4, 6pm-10pm
re:agency | Media Arts and Technology End of Year Show UCSB’s Media Arts and Technology (MAT) Graduate Program is hosting its End of Year Show (EoYS), re:agency, to celebrate another year of groundbreaking research. The EoYS is an annual event where guests are invited to step into the fusion of media arts and technology to experience innovative projec...
05/25/2026
First Thursday, June 4th, 6pm-10pm at SBCAST - 513 Garden Street. Parking at SB City Lots 10 and 11.
UCSB Media Arts and Technology End of Year Show - always one of the most engaging and provocative art exhibitions in Santa Barbara.
Art that elucidates the boundaries between technology, media and humanity.
MAT End of Year Show - Re: agency re: imagine, re: purpose, re: configure The MAT department will showcase the cutting-edge research and new media artworks of our students, presented on June 4th at the Santa Barbara Center for Art, Science, and Technology (SBCAST).
12/25/2025
The 20 Most Powerless People in the Art World: 2025 Edition Hyperallergic’s annual antidote to the lists of wealthy collectors, royals, and so-called tastemakers that pervade the art media.
11/09/2025
Body Electric Exhibition
December 5th - 7th, 2025
Opening, reception and performances: Friday,
December 5th at 6pm, performances at 7pm
Exhibition Open to Public: Saturday, December 6th and Sunday, December 7th from 12pm - 4pm
Inspired by Walt Whitman's visionary poem
"I Sing the Body Electric”, this exhibition reimagines the body as a network of electric impulses, voltages, and signals that both generate and transmit lived experiences.
Body Electric brings together artists, researchers, performers, and technologists who explore the inner electrical life of the human body through biophysical sensing. By capturing physiological signals such as
brainwaves (EEG), heart rhythms (ECG), and muscle activity (EMG). The exhibition reveals the hidden languages of the body - not as metaphor, but as material, as data, as expression.
Electricity governs life on Earth at every scale, from small molecular organisms to sophisticated evolved beings. In the human body, in particular, electricity has presents itself as the firing of neurons, the pulse of the
heart, the conductivity of the skin, and the flux of emotional states. This exhibition foregrounds electricity not only as a force of animation, but as a creative medium — a raw, natural element that artists can research for an important book. sense, shape, and translate. The electric medium is further carried into the technological domain as a
means of instrumentation and expression of gathered data from the human body. Through interactive installations, performances, and sonic-visual systems, Body Electric invites audiences to witness how the body thinks, feels, and reacts beneath the surface. What emerges is a portrait of the human not
as a fixed entity, but as an ever-changing field of affective and electrical relations.
Body Electric will take place this December at Charles Street Video (Toronto) and features contributions from York University faculty, students, and international collaborators. The programme will showcase interactive sculptures, VR installation, and live
performances — including a new work by composer Gene Coleman, performing with violinist Amy Hillis from York's Music Department, body physiology sensing chairs originally conceptualised by artist Alan
Macy (SBCAST), and archival and yet pivotal work by artist, composer and scholar David Rosenboom. The exhibition builds a living bridge between the past and the present, connecting analogue pioneers with today's
generative futures, and invites us to look into the future with an open and curious mind
10/29/2025
Closing out this year and looking forward to BNW in October 2026!
10/03/2025
Brave New Work - a new initiative in Santa Barbara 10/7-10/9
https://www.independent.com/2025/10/02/step-into-the-unknown-at-brave-new-work/?fbclid=IwRlRTSANMMJFleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHt2HdvEQNRcRtnBKLRlOP-Qq3ObASL8iWCcqvNXh2aWZF1JRXZ7_wpqehg2g_aem_rLHfCbS6MLofjBHuShlmiA
Step Into the Unknown at Brave New Work World leaders in art and technology gather in Santa Barbara to discuss our future.
10/03/2025
Brave New Work - In Santa Barbara 10/7-10/9
www.bravenewwork.org
The plethora of noteworthy art offerings this fall season is quite impressive. From the unknown future intersection of art and technology of Brave New Work, to two landmark exhibitions of Impressionist and 19th-century artworks by Monet, van Gogh, Matisse, and Gauguin, among others, at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, plus Goleta-bred DJ Javier’s first solo exhibition at Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara, and the oodles of exciting art shows for us to ogle over at museums and galleries all over town — our cultural cup runneth over right now.
This fall’s abundance of art in our museums and galleries, not to mention outside at the Library Plaza (thanks to Brave New Work), is well worth celebrating and savoring. Read on and enjoy!
To read the full cover story check out your nearest newsstand or click here: https://www.independent.com/2025/10/01/fall-visual-arts-preview-mark-your-cultural-calendars-for-all-sorts-of-art/
Out of town and can’t get to your nearest newsstand in Santa Barbara County? Not to worry! We put our weekly issue online each week, so you can have the print experience from anywhere: https://issuu.com/santabarbaraindependent/docs/santa_barbara_independent_10_2_25
🎨: Xavier Pereyra
Sources: Courtesy
09/24/2025
Learn how to apply your design superpowers for social and ecological impact from two of the world's most impactful design visionaries.
Location:
Camp Earnest
21553 Cedar Springs Road Twain Harte, CA 95383
Date:
October 13 · 2pm - October 17 · 2pm PDT
Design for Exponential Impact at Camp Earnest Learn how to apply your design superpowers for social and ecological impact from two of the world's most impactful design visionaries.
09/24/2025
What is happening in the art world? How are technology and advancing computational systems affecting evolution in the arts? What is the meaning and promise of this work? What are the future implications of collecting, exhibiting and maintaining art - as described in “Brave New Work”?
A large number of arts-related institutions and organizations (in no particular order - University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, UCSB Media Arts and Technology, the Allosphere, ADA Museum, Santa Barbara Independent, Chumash Foundation, MCASB, VADA, CAW, Sullivan Goss, David Bermant Foundation, Unite to Light, Peter Brill Foundation, SBCAST) are interested in these questions. If you are too, perhaps consider attending at this inaugural event?
08/30/2025
Science funding has proven to be a marvelously effective and efficient way to improve our circumstances. Present day telecommunications is one example. Many advances result from developing mathematical theory. Budget attacks in this area, as well as to science and R&D efforts, are profoundly unwise and shortsighted.
https://www.nbcnews.com/science/science-news/mozart-math-rarely-speaks-politics-wide-ranging-cuts-science-funding-m-rcna226033
The 'Mozart of Math' rarely speaks about politics. The wide-ranging cuts to science funding made him change that. UCLA's Terence Tao called the Trump administration's actions an "existential threat" to academic research in the U.S.
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