Our curatorial direction
The AIR program expands upon the SETI Institute’s mission to explore, understand, and explain the origin, nature, and prevalence of life in the universe. The artworks, performances, and public projects resulting from the AIR collaborations are at the cutting edge of artistic and scientific practice. Our program encompasses various artistic disciplines, including visual arts, literature and spoken word, music, film, dance, and theatre.
Our curatorial direction emphasizes projects that consider the evolution of intelligence, ponder the beginnings of life, and critically reflect on our anthropocentric world view.
Our projects
Our community of artists in residence is at the core of the SETI AIR program. We actively support the development, creation, and exhibition of their projects. We are also actively engaged in project-based collaborations with arts organizations and artist groups. These dynamic partnerships include the SETI x AI residency with Ars Electronica and the Making Contact exhibition at the New Museum in Los Gatos. The Center for Art + Environment at the Nevada Museum of Art houses the SETI AIR archive, which allows us to share the AIR program’s creative outcomes with international researchers, artists, and academics.

SETI AIR Newsletter - July 2025
#SETI AIR Newsletter #AIR
Dreams of Biogenesis: Visualizing the Origins of Life
#Blog #Drake Awards #AIR #SETI
SETI Institute Unveils Planetary Futures: A New Residency Bringing Climate and Public Art Together
#AIR #SETI InstituteSETI AIR Program Team

Bettina Forget
SETI AIR Program Director
The SETI AIR program, led by Bettina Forget with guidance from its Advisory Committee, benefits from the expertise of a diverse group of curators, scholars, scientists, artists, and writers. These Advisors play a vital role in shaping the program’s vision by offering their extensive knowledge and unique perspectives. They assist in the selection process for residency nominees, foster connections between artists and the program’s extensive network of institutional partners and collaborators, and contribute insights drawn from their varied professional backgrounds.
We are fortunate to collaborate with national and international partners who at the forefront of contemporary art. Our primary institutional partners include the Montalvo Arts Center, the Nevada Museum of Art, and the Long Now Foundation. We collaborate on project-based partnerships with art associations and cultural venues such as Ars Electronica and Theater Mitu. The list of supportive institutions in our network includes MIT Media Lab, Stanford’s CCRMA Electronic Music School, Cal Arts, and Gray Area.
Institutional Partners
Montalvo Arts Center
Our partnership with the Sally and Don Lucas Artists Residency Program (LAP) at Montalvo Arts Center enables us to offer SETI AIRs one month in residence at LAP’s live-work facility in nearby Saratoga, CA.
Set in a 175-acre public park and historic property, the LAP supports the incubation and presentation of art and ideas and hosts over 100 artists from around the world from various backgrounds and disciplines each year. Through this partnership, SETI artists have access to a creative community of artists and thinkers, administrative staff support, and the opportunity to present their work to Bay Area audiences through varied public programming opportunities. For more information about the LAP, see: montalvoarts.org/lap and montalvoarts.org/programs/residency
Nevada Museum of Art, Center of Art + Environment
The Center for Art + Environment, housed at the Nevada Museum of Art, hosted the SETI AIR Program archive.
The Center for Art + Environment is an internationally recognized research center that supports the practice, study, and awareness of creative interactions between people and their natural, built, and virtual environments.
Housed at the Nevada Museum of Art, the Center is home to a focused research library with archive collections from over 1,000 artists and organizations working on all seven continents.
Museum website
Long Now Foundation
The San Francisco-based Long Now Foundation provides memberships for our SETI Air program artists.
The Long Now Foundation was established in 1996 to develop the Clock and Library projects, as well as to become the seed of a very long-term cultural institution. The Long Now Foundation hopes to provide a counterpoint to today's accelerating culture and help make long-term thinking more common.
Project-Based Collaborations
Ars Electronica
The SETI AIR program partnered with Ars Electronica, based in Linz, Austria, to create the SETI x AI residency.
Ars Electronica, based in Linz, Austria, is best known for its annual festival for art, technology, and society. The organization’s focus on AI, futurism, and digital humanism intersects with the SETI Institute’s research into alien intelligence, machine learning, and the search for cosmic technosignatures. The SETI x AI residency is part of the AI Lab (European ARTificial Intelligence Lab). It offers international artists working in AI a chance to win a residency at a scientific partner institution and the Futurelab of Ars Electronica. Ars Electronica site
Theater Mitu
The SETI AIR Program is supporting the Brooklyn-based Theater Mitu in the development of the cross-disciplinary project Utopian Hotline.
Driven by a commitment to innovation, Theater Mitu expands the definition of theater through methodical experimentation with its form. Framing artmaking as a mode of research and inquiry, we share knowledge, spark dialogue, and strengthen our community through cultivating radical ways of reimagining our world. Theater Mitu embodies this by way of our annual activities: theatrical productions and exhibitions, trans-global research initiatives, artist support opportunities, education programs galvanizing the next generation of artists, and the curated programming of MITU580, our 2,400 square foot multi-use art space in Brooklyn, NY.
Information for Artists
History of the Program
The launch of the SETI Institute’s Artist-in-Residence (AIR) program is due to an encounter between multi-disciplinary artist Charles Lindsay and the then Chair of SETI Research Jill Tarter in May 2010.
Contact Us
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