By regarding it through the filter of science, the diverse experience of intimacy was fragmented into a set of identifiable interpersonal behavioural, cognitive and emotional phenomena.
This approach led to the identification of salient themes such as: embodied cognition; loneliness and health; closeness and mutual knowledge; the relationship between intimacy and time, synchronicity; empathy; the relationship between intimacy and loss; learning and memory; risk, trust, prediction and decision making, styles of attachment and epigenetics, etc.
Channelled into the realisation of a themed public art-science exhibition, this framework informed the identification of representations of intimacy in photography, installation, performance art, virtual reality etc. to explore how, and to what degree of overlap, science, the visual arts as well as emerging technologies and design address and conceptualise intimate connection by their own methods of inquiry, and whether they may mutually inspire one another.