The Overview Effect
Three video artworks explore our time on Earth, offering a shift in perspective through their depictions of the natural world. Ends Saturday.
With the exception of the ticketed performance Bat Night Market, entry to all exhibitions and events is FREE.
Three video artworks explore our time on Earth, offering a shift in perspective through their depictions of the natural world. Ends Saturday.
Photography, comic strips, poems and games reveal the human stories of those who care for loved ones dying with dementia.
Participatory researchers explore the contributions of ‘experts by experience’ – people with lived experience of an issue or system – in the research process.
Structured in seven days, each symbolising a different epoch in the history of the earth, Rachel Rose’s video work comprises thousands of medium format photographs shot in her children’s bedroom.
A feminist encounter with cardiovascular science by artist and sociologist Nina Wakeford and King’s Professors Anne Pollock and Susan Brain
Combining science, performance and speculative design, step into a night market of the future. This is a ticketed event part of LIFT 2024
A celebration of self-expression and authenticity, championing young Black talent and cultures through film, rap and spoken word.
A lunchtime talk with Dr Irene Di Giulio, lecturer in anatomy and biomechanics, about her research into the accessibility of spaceflight
Exploring the journeys of creative young people and families navigating the road of healing, hope and resolution with the support of their village and networks.
As part of The Overview Effect, we present an evening of artists' films on the theme of space travel.
Join us for a celebration of the exhibition and the students who made it, and listen to an illuminating panel event about women in science.
A Japanese astronaut’s existential wonder for the cosmos sparks an exploration into the perplexing experience of navigating our everyday lives in Ruth Waters’ film.
Through the 200 million year old ginkgo tree, Tang Han contemplates shifting human greed, our interconnectedness with non-humans, and the continuity of life.
Students from the LGBTQ+ Society and Womxn in Biosciences collaborate with Grrrl Zine Fair to raise awareness of trans+ people’s and women’s exclusion in healthcare.
Music, rap, poetry and spoken word with romantic vibes from our resident artists, The Spit Game UK
An afternoon of moving image works that explore current discussions around AI in relation to the natural world.
An event for arts sector workers - including curators, producers and gallerists - who have an interest in commissioning and presenting art that engages with AI.
A half-day workshop for artists working with AI featuring performances, provocations and discussions about issues such as IP, consent and bias.
Join artist Sarah Selby as she fills pens with synthetic DNA writing ink, and prepares them for distribution as part of her Lumen Prize-winning creative intervention.
A relaxed platform for spoken word, poetry and music performance from Just Futures residents The Spit Game UK.
Experience elements of Helen Knowles' participatory artwork that considers what is at stake when psychedelic intelligences look after human health.
Dr Thomas Booth presents some recent breakthroughs in diagnostic AI focused on the field of abnormality detection.
Btihaj Ajana examines the extent to which self-tracking devices and apps can be considered as tools of self-care.
What are the consequences of relying on generative technology for our creativity? Open roundtable discussion with Tiarna Lee and Jhanelle White.
Can you beat the AI? How (Not) to Get Hit by a Self-Driving Car is just one of the interactive attractions in the second of our lively Friday Lates.
An interactive session with Caitlin Bentley looking at participatory AI design with and for people at risk of marginalisation.
Dr Mercedes Bunz and Eva Jäger present their research for the Creative AI Lab - a collaboration between King’s and the Serpentine Gallery
Who should be involved in developing ethical frameworks in AI design? Governance and regulation come under the spotlight in this urgent panel event.
Dr Gabrielle Samuel questions some of the assumptions associated with AI’s promise to solve some of society’s biggest challenges.
Researchers and research students are invited to learn more about how we devise the programme at Science Gallery London, and the integral place of King's research within it.
How we design AI systems that don’t create or perpetuate health disparities as faced by vulnerable groups? Join us for vital debate with an expert panel.
Join Elizabeth Black for a conversation about what we need from AI to be able to trust it, and the role the media can play.
To mark World Mental Health Day, Marcus Coates’ film explores lived experience of psychosis - presented in partnership with Artangel and King’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience.
Another chance to see Murthovic & Thirdua’s dazzling audiovisual performance that combines immersive 3D worlds, generative AI art and live DJs.
Knitting and crochet for social purpose - join Craft Froward for a marathon session making blankets for Londoners experiencing homelessness.
Join us for an open and honest exploration about trust, accuracy and bias in algorithms that can neither think nor feel.
The first of two Friday Lates looks at the stories and speculations around AI through an exciting programme of live performances, discussions and interactive displays.