Hannah Redler-Hawes
Hannah Redler-Hawes is a curator and consultant specialising in digital, AI and emerging media practices. She is Director of Data as Culture (Associate) at the Open Data Institute.[1] Between 1998 and 2014 she worked with the Science Museum Group as Head of Science Museum Arts Programme.[2]
Education
Redler-Hawes has a degree in Fine art Painting from Norwich University of the Arts 1989 - 1991 and a second degree in Curating from the Royal College of Art 1994 - 1996.[3]
Career
In February 2016 Redler-Hawes gave a keynote address Where are we now? Art, Science and Interdisciplinary Practice at the Silent Signal Symposium.[4] As an independent researcher she has published 15 papers.[5] In 2021 she gave a talk titled Data, art and living systems at the V&A.[6]
In 2018 she curated Hooked: When Want Becomes Need for the Science Gallery London.[7] In 2023 Redler-Hawes commissioned artist Alan Warburton to create a video essay titled The Wizard of AI,[8] a twenty-minute, 99% AI-generated visual essay, exploring the impact AI has on the creative world.[9]
References
- ^ "Hannah Redler-Hawes". journal.sciencemuseum.ac.uk. Retrieved March 1, 2026.
- ^ "Translating nature". translatingnature.org. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ ART.ZIP (August 21, 2017). "Unstable Media: A Conversation with Art Curator Hannah Redler". ART.ZIP. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ "Where are we now? Art, Science and Interdisciplinary Practice (edited transcript)". Silent Signal. May 11, 2016. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ hawes, hannah redler. "Hannah Redler Hawes - Independent Researcher". independent.academia.edu. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ "Online talk: Data, art and living systems - Talk at V&A South Kensington ยท V&A". Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ adam (September 20, 2018). "London Art Exhibition Challenges Addiction & Recovery Perceptions". PCP - The Perry Clayman Project. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ Culture, Data as (November 20, 2023). "The Wizard of AI - Data as Culture - ODI - The Open Data Institute". Data as Culture. Retrieved 2026-03-01.
- ^ Nunwick, Alice (January 15, 2024). "Businesses still need human artists in the age of AI". Verdict. Retrieved 2026-03-01.