Calculus of the Nervous System
Date and time
Engage with Ada Lovelace’s legacy, and its intersection with academic research and creativity, in this concert and conversation
About this event
Emily HOWARD | Ada sketches
Emily HOWARD | Wild Clematis in Winter
Emily HOWARD | But then, what are these numbers?
PRiSM Team led by Robert Laidlow | Alter
TORCH is proud to present works by leading British composer, Emily Howard, inspired by the pioneering nineteenth-century mathematician, Ada Lovelace, as well as a new work by the interdisciplinary PRiSM team at the RNCM led by composer Robert Laidlow, PRiSM Researcher in AI-assisted Composition, which similarly engages with questions of art, science and artificial intelligence. TORCH is particularly pleased to be able to support the second performances of new commissions for the Barbican Centre, But then, what are these numbers? and Alter premiered in London on 2 November 2019.
Lovelace dabbled in mesmerism, a forerunner of hypnosis developed by physician Franz Mesmer, and wrote that she wished to develop a ‘calculus of the nervous system’: a mathematical model for how the brain could give rise to thought, and nerves to feelings. This evening’s programme – performed by the Britten Sinfonia and the outstanding British-Spanish soprano, Marta Fontanals-Simmons – explores the relationship between science and art, thought and feeling, new technologies and human creativity, and pays tribute to Lovelace’s remarkable scientific imagination and its continued relevance for our own contemporary society.
In addition to performances of these compositions, Emily Howard and Robert Laidlow will be in conversation with David de Roure (Professor of E-Research, University of Oxford) and Ursula Martin (Visiting Professor of Mathematics, University of Oxford), about Lovelace’s legacy and the interface between academic research and artistic creativity.
Free and open to all.
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