Emma hart actress

Biography

Emma Hart lives and works in London. Hart makes exuberant ceramic sculptures, which test the limits of the medium, pushing clay to go beyond being a vessel. Hart’s vivid sculptures actively confront the viewer often by jutting out from the wall or physically encroaching on the viewer’s personal space.

In 2023 Hart created the permanent artwork Hear Now! for the public entrance of the new UCL East building in London. In 2024 Emma Hart's Club Together opened, a major permanent installation for Modern Art Oxford in the form of a 60 seat cafe. 

In 2022 she was awarded a Henry Moore Foundation Artist Award. In 2017 she won the Max Mara Art Prize for Women in collaboration with the Whitechapel Gallery, and in 2015 she was awarded a Paul Hamlyn Foundation award for Visual Art.

Major solo exhibitions include Big Time (Hospitalfield, Scotland 2023 and Frieze Sculpture, London 2022),  Big Mouth, (Barakat Contemporary, Seoul, 2022); Banger (Fruitmarket, Edinburgh, 2018), Mamma Mia! (Whitechapel Gallery, London, Collezione Maramotti, Reggio Emilia, 2017), Giving It All That

Emma Hart (computer scientist)

English computer scientist

Professor Emma Hart, FRSE (born 1967) is an English computer scientist known for her work in artificial immune systems (AIS), evolutionary computation and optimisation. She is a professor of computational intelligence at Edinburgh Napier University, editor-in-chief of the Journal of Evolutionary Computation (MIT Press), and D. Coordinator of the Future & Emerging Technologies (FET) Proactive Initiative, Fundamentals of Collective Adaptive Systems.

Early life and education

Hart was born in Middlesbrough, England in 1967.[1] In 1990 she graduated from the University of Oxford with a first class BA(Hons) in Chemistry. She then continued her studies at the University of Edinburgh, graduating with an MSc in Artificial Intelligence in 1994, followed by a PhD that explored the use of immunology as an inspiration for computing, examining a range of techniques applied to optimization and data classification problems.[2] Her dissertation was titled Immunology as a metaphor for computational

Emma Willard

American women's rights activist

Emma Willard

Emma Willard, c. 1805–1815

Born

Emma Hart


February 23, 1787

Berlin, Connecticut, U.S.

DiedApril 15, 1870 (aged 83)

Troy, New York, U.S.

Occupation(s)Educator, author, women's rights activist

Emma Willard (néeHart; February 23, 1787 – April 15, 1870) was an American female education activist who dedicated her life to education. She worked in several schools and founded the first school for women's higher education in the United States, the Troy Female Seminary in Troy, New York. With the success of her school, Willard was able to travel across the country and abroad to promote education for women. The seminary was renamed the Emma Willard School in 1895 in her honor.

Early life

Emma Willard was born on February 23, 1787, in Berlin, Connecticut.[1] She was the sixteenth of seventeen children from her father, Samuel Hart, and his second wife Lydia Hinsdale Hart.[2] Her father was a farmer who encouraged his children to read and think for themselves. At a

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