MIT Open Documentary Lab presents a conversation between Moderna co-founder Noubar Afeyan and storyteller Sona Tatoyan about their shared mission to heal the world through science and art.
Guided by María Puig de la Bellacasa’s understanding of care as a world-making ethic, ACT takes up the charge to turn art into durable infrastructures of care. Quantum Healing convenes a scientist and a storyteller to show how art and technology metabolize inherited trauma into shared resilience; for ACT, care is not sentiment but method – an embodied, iterative practice for prototyping better worlds across disciplines, diasporas, and more-than-human relations. – Gediminas Urbonas
A conversation between Syrian-Armenian-American storyteller and Hakawati founder Sona Tatoyan and Lebanese-Armenian-Canadian-American Entrepreneur and Moderna Co-Founder Noubar Afeyan, two visionary Armenian diaspora leaders bound by heritage and a shared mission to heal the world: one through art and the other through science. Hear how they turned their genocidal legacies and experience with oppressive regimes into triumphant acts of resilience, creativity, and healing. Learn how they innovate and iterate to create groundbreaking work in the arts and sciences. How does storytelling heal societal wounds? Can scientific leaps mirror artistic epiphanies and vice versa? How do their legacies inform their work and mission? What advice do they have for scientists and artists working in today’s climate? They will discuss these questions and more.
Moderated by Professor Lerna Ekmekcioglu.
📅 Friday, October 24, 6 – 7:30 PM
📍 MIT Museum, 314 Main Street, Lee Family Exchange Space, Cambridge, MA 02142
This event is generously supported by the MIT Program in Art, Culture, and Technology and Radius



