VAD – Visualization, Art, & Design

Applications at the intersection of art and visualization have become a recurring theme at visualization, graphics, and HCI conferences. Inspirations from artistic movements, artistic practice, and the field of aesthetics have stimulated visualization research, with an increasing number of practitioners creating works that transcend these fields. Performance, sonic, and visual artists, designers, and architects have capitalized on innovations from the computing sciences, expanding their semiology to create radically new representations of form and process. At the core of all works is the concept of information, its transformation, and its representation. It is at this nexus that the symposium resides. Its goal is to develop and promote an expanding dialog among individuals and groups working in the digital information arts, sciences, and technologies by providing a venue for discussions about their works and the processes through which they were created.
Submissions to this symposium are invited from the breadth of the digital arts, science, and technology, including artists, scientists, technologists, designers, architects, psychologists, historians, critical theorists, practitioners, and others. Theories, applications, analyses, case studies, reviews, and manifestos that address all processes or products are welcome. Topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Artistic and design practices supporting the visualization process
  • Artist, designer, scientist, technologist collaborations
  • Art by visualizers
  • Visualizations by artists and designers
  • Artistic creations and practice based on scientific/technological models and simulations
  • Virtual and physical information artifacts related to, or created through, artistic and design processes
  • Artistic mapping of information, including cartographic art, virtual and built architectural environments, interactive systems, and animations.
  • Infographic design and its associated process
  • The role of the viewer in visualization design
  • Visualization design aesthetics
  • The role of aesthetics in the design of information visualization tools

Symposium Committee
Tega Brain, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Daragh Byrne, Carnegie Mellon University, PA, USA
Lynn Cazabon, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, MD, USA
Grisha Coleman, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

Please check the submission procedures @ the submission page.
General enquiries and submissions should be addressed to the Conference Coordinator.
Symposium-specific enquiries should be addressed to:

Acting Symposium coordinator
Ebad Banissi (Dr, Emeritus Prof.)
Graphicslink, UK
Banissi (@) graphicslink.co.uk