The idea of two cultures is something that I personally have dealt with my whole entire life. I attended High Tech High Media Arts, a school that used multimedia and media arts to display the knowledge we learned about math/science concepts learned in normal high schools. I personally feel like using art to explain what you know about math/science is a better way that current school curriculums because you actually have to conceptually understand whatever you are explaining.
Coming to UCLA is a huge change for somebody like me, because now art and science are completely separated. In high school, I would go to science class, and then immediately after go to art and do some sort of art project about the science I learned. I think that this really helped created the "3rd culture" or more of the grey culture, that helped combine these two instead of creating the negative stereotypes associated with them. A good example of this is the "mac vs. pc" debate. South campus has always been more of a pc campus, and north campus being macs. With macs generally looking cleaner, much like north campuses architecture, and north campus computers being more boring, much like their architecture.

I think getting to this 3rd culture would save many types of art. For instance, a beautiful art form I personally enjoy is graffiti, which is generally associated with criminals, but one project I did in high school is follow around a graffiti artist day to day, and he was just a normal person with nowhere legal to express his medium of art.
Another art form, tattoos, have a very negative stereotype related to them, but can also be very artistic.
I'm excited to take this class and try to help the world reach a level of combining the two cultures, because I believe if we can combine the two we could really improve a lot of aspects of the world.
SOURCES:
Art&ScienceTattoo. 2010. Photograph. unknown. Web. <http://hobbesdutt.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ArtvSci.jpg>
Mac vs. PC. 2011. Photograph. HobbesDutt. Web. <http://hobbesdutt.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/ArtvSci.jpg>
Graffiti. 2011. Photograph. Neil Baffert.Web. <https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgr1v55HIE3IYNwwpkeI78ia5NnOPhrXsDuC1Qg6K5hVpyIA0WsMdH5YKFBVEBPRRpMychAZxyow05LCE7yFGysjYBsYNHV4Cy9XEP4B1NBqMM8U5pBnsvalVV2kDyI1pyaGXU0z3oGuhbx/s1600/sickness.JPG>
Snow, C. P. “Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution.” Reading. 1959. New York: Cambridge UP, 1961. Print.
Vesna, Victoria. “Lecture: Design and Media Arts 9.” University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles. October 2013.