| CARVIEW |
Develop your technical literacy
and creative design skills
For more information, visit:
www.mat.ucsb.edu/mad
Media Arts and Technology
Graduate Program
University of California Santa Barbara
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"HIVE", Sölen Kiratli
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"Generative Drift", Paul Jacobs
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Graham Wakefield in the AlloSphere
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"Time Giver", Yuan Yi Fan, Myles Sciotto
Events
Abstract
My practice is driven by the ambition to design life—a synthetic, bottom-up pursuit of liveliness itself. This talk traces a research trajectory that builds on origin-of-life sciences, orchestrating three core agencies to prefigure a future artificial life form: AI ontologies (‘soft’ ALife) to model intelligence; electroactive microbes (‘wet’ ALife) to provide a metabolic, communicative ‘flesh’; and dynamic mineral substrates to form resilient, structural ‘bones.’ Such a pursuit demands a foundational ethic: to take full responsibility for the designed entities. Following Latour, this means learning to love our monsters. The ambition is not spectacle, but to forge mutualistic relationships with constructed life—relationships as demanding and creative as those with nature. The result is architectures that counter an extractive industrial logic by contributing through their day-to-day existence to the overall liveliness of the world. Expanding the potential of life is an Earth imperative. While autonomous artificial life remains the horizon, the urgent work is to build its ethical, material, and intellectual prerequisites. I will present this work, arguing for a future where our built environment is not just sustainable, but constitutively alive.
For further reading, you can download a PDF of her book "Liquid Life: On Non-Liner Materiality"
Bio
Professor Rachel Armstrong, PhD, is a practitioner and theorist whose work establishes a new trajectory for architecture: the design of artificial life. With a First Class Honours in medical science (University of Cambridge) and a PhD in Architecture (UCL), her practice is a synthetic pursuit of liveliness grounded in origin-of-life sciences. Her designs and prototypes are vibrant, metabolic systems that host, support, and propagate life, transforming architecture's role from creating static spaces to cultivating dynamic, living ecosystems.
Professor Rachel Armstrong's current roles also include:
Project Coordinator: Microbial Hydroponics (Mi-Hy)
Microbial WiFi Project
Exhibitor: Spika
EIC Ambassador
For more information about the MAT Seminar Series, go to:
seminar.mat.ucsb.edu.
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"Knot", Pablo Colapinto
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"Artificial Nature, Time of Doubles", Haru Ji and Graham Wakefield
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"openPOT", Jing Yan
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"Extruding Circos", Mohit Hingorani
News
Çağlarcan described his winning piece "Shadows" as an audiovisual transdisciplinary artwork that explores spiritual and social connections as his music overlays a selection of oil paintings by his brother, Güneş Çağlarcan, an accomplished painter and pianist.
For more information please read the article in the UCSB Current online magazine.
The project, Embodied Ink, was showcased at MAT's End of Year Show this past Spring.
Read the full paper here:
dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3746027.3756139
Video Presentation:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=08egiTo7yto
The fellowship allows Croskey to pursue a project that she is passionate about - enabling marginalized communities to secure their place in the future historical record, ensuring that emergent technologies, such as AI, elevate and empower these groups by reflecting their histories.
"Receiving the NSF GRFP amid our current political climate has given me an even greater sense of responsibility to pursue my research with full force,” Croskey said."
Read more in the UCSB College of Engineering Newsletter.
This year’s theme was “Myths and Legends”. Other artists receiving the award with Professor Kuchera-Morin were Mary Heebner, Gabriela Ruiz, Manjari Sharma, and Diana Thater.
The software creates personalized visuals and abstract art in an immersive landscape that is based on the memories of the crew members. The news articles highlight their work on a software pipeline that was being used at the St. Kliment Ohridski base on Livingston Island, Antarctica.
For more information, please see:
UCSB's The Current news magazine article:
New frontiers for well-being in Antarctica and isolated spaces.
Santa Barbara Independent article:
UC Santa Barbara Researchers Design Tools to Combat Isolation in Extreme Environments.
Iason Paterakis, Nefeli Manoudaki - AI driven visuals: Icescape
Iason Paterakis, Nefeli Manoudaki - AI driven visuals: Beach
Iason Paterakis, Nefeli Manoudaki - AI driven visuals: Plains
The title of the NSF award is Dynamic Control Systems for Manual-Computational Fabrication. Professor Jacobs was awarded the NSF Career Award to further her research in integrating skilled manual and material production with computational fabrication.
The CAREER Program offers the NSF's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization.
Professor Jacobs thanks all of the amazing members the Expressive Computation Lab whose research contributed the intellectual foundations of this award.
UCSB News: Making Automation More Human Through Innovative Fabrication Tools
NSF link: Dynamic Control Systems for Manual-Computational Fabrication
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"Take Flight", Qian Liu, Yun Teng
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Muhammad Hafiz Wan Rosli
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"VOSIS", Ryan McGee
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David Gordon
End of Year Show
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"Stoicheia", Jean-Michel Crettaz and Myles Sciotto
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Jing Yan
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"S-Phase", Lance Putnam
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"Trees", Tim Wood
About MAT
Media Arts and Technology (MAT) at UCSB is a transdisciplinary graduate program that fuses emergent media, computer science, engineering, electronic music and digital art research, practice, production, and theory. Created by faculty in both the College of Engineering and the College of Letters and Science, MAT offers an unparalleled opportunity for working at the frontiers of art, science, and technology, where new art forms are born and new expressive media are invented.
In MAT, we seek to define and to create the future of media art and media technology. Our research explores the limits of what is possible in technologically sophisticated art and media, both from an artistic and an engineering viewpoint. Combining art, science, engineering, and theory, MAT graduate studies provide students with a combination of critical and technical tools that prepare them for leadership roles in artistic, engineering, production/direction, educational, and research contexts.
The program offers Master of Science and Ph.D. degrees in Media Arts and Technology. MAT students may focus on an area of emphasis (multimedia engineering, electronic music and sound design, or visual and spatial arts), but all students should strive to transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries and work with other students and faculty in collaborative, multidisciplinary research projects and courses.
Alumni Testimonials
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"With a deep interest in exploring sound, not only creatively, but technically and scientifically, I began my studies at MAT at UCSB. It was here, through academic discipline and perseverance, alongside professors and colleagues, that I was able to hone my skills and begin my successful career.
Years later, I am leading development of game audio and augmented reality technology at Apple.
The strong academic foundations that I gained in spatial audio, sound synthesis, and audio engine architecture have allowed me to achieve even greater success in my career. I will always be grateful to those who helped me take those first steps to success!"
David Thall
Lead Audio Programmer
Game and Augmented Reality Technology
Apple -
"As a UCSB MAT Master's student (2002-2004), I benefited greatly from the required and elective courses taught by professional leaders with broad perspectives, both technical and humanistic. This helped me to improve my research skills, and to refine my academic vision, which culminated in a PhD (2009) from UCSB Electrical and Computer Engineering specializing in Digital Signal Processing. Since that time I have been employed at several academic institutions around Europe, where my broad technical and humanistic perspective has been unique and advantageous."
Bob L. Sturm, Associate Professor
School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science
Royal Institute of Technology KTH
Stockholm, Sweden -
"As one of the first graduates of the Media Arts and Technology PhD program, I have found the experiences provided by the MAT community invaluable to both my professional development and personal enjoyment of creating technology-based experiences, throughout life. I have been employed for more than 10 years now in the department of Architecture, Design and Media Technology at Aalborg University Copenhagen, where I teach both interaction design and real-time signal processing for audio and music performance. As Associate Professor, I guide students to create their own software and hardware tools, concepts, and practices for creating new sonic and embodied interactions, as well as running the Augmented Performance Lab. Together with my colleagues, I helped start the Sound and Music Computing masters program in 2014, and co-chaired the international New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) conference in 2017."
Dan Overholt
Associate Professor
Aalborg Univeristy, Copenhagen
Denmark -
"MAT is a rare graduate program in that it operates more like an creative ecosystem -- your work as a researcher is significant and connects to others. People care a lot about what you are doing, and invest thought into your own thinking. Throughout my eight years of study, from 2007 to 2015, and as a postdoctoral student afterwards, this supportive environment provided the technological, financial, and intellectual resources necessary for me to take risks in my work. As a result, I was able to dive deep into subjects I thought were off limits to my cognitive function, and achieve the great satisfaction of learning how to learn better. It is a testament to the culture fostered there that an experimental filmmaker such as myself entering the program with very basic programming skills can now make regular contributions to mathematics journals, work as a real-time computer graphics programmer in the DTLA arts district, be asked to consult on science fiction television dramas, and innovate novel geometrical algorithms of use in architecture. I think the MAT program at UCSB is a hidden gem -- you enter it with one direction in mind, and come out brilliantly refracted into a spectrum of possibilities."
Pablo Colapinto
Oblong Industries Inc & Independent Artist
Los Angeles -
"The education and mentorship I received as an MAT student gave me the skills to discuss my work critically and in the context of the rich history of media arts; and has been pivotal in having my work accepted in exhibitions around the world, including Dubai, Montreal, Tehran, Hong Kong, New York and cities throughout the US. Further, my PhD in MAT was instrumental in securing my position as Curator of Interactive Media for MOXI, the Wolf Museum of Exploration and Innovation. In that capacity, almost half of the artists I have curated into MOXI have been MAT alumni, MAT faculty, MAT students, and distinguished media artists who I met as part of my work in the MAT program. My collaborations with MAT students and alumni are ongoing, and I continue to be grateful for the education, mentorship and community of the UCSB MAT program."
Marco Pinter
Computational Artist
Curator of Interactive Media, MOXI (The Wolf Museum of Exploration + Innovation)
Director of Software Innovation, InTouch Health
Deniz Çağlarcan, a MAT MSc student and Music PhD student, has won the prestigious PRIX CIME 2025 International Electroacoustic Music Competition.
Congrats to MAT PhD student Anna Borou Yu, who received the Best Interactive Art Award at the ACM Multimedia International Conference in Dublin, Ireland. The conference took place from October 27 to October 31, 2025.
Congratulations to Payton Croskey, who recently received one of the 2025 Graduate Research Fellowships from the National Science Foundation.
Professor Kuchera-Morin has received a 2025 Art Award by The Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara. The awards ceremony took place on July 13, 2025 at MCASB in downtown Santa Barbara.
An AI driven audio-visual system developed by MAT PhD students Iason Paterakis and Nefeli Manoudaki has been featured in the Santa Barbara Independent newspaper and the UCSB Current magazine. The system was developed to help researchers cope with the difficulties of working in remote, extreme environments.
MAT Professor Jennifer Jacobs has been awarded the NSF CAREER Award to conduct research in Dynamic Control Systems for Manual-Computational Fabrication.
