From Oct. 9-30, the University of Guelph and Ed Video hosted a special art exhibit entitled "This View of Life: Evolutionary Art for the Year of Darwin". It was organized by professors in four departments: Integrative Biology, Philosophy, History, and English and Theatre Studies, and curated by Scott McGovern of Ed Video. The exhibit featured art by 10 artists, all inspired by the themes of evolution, Darwin, and biodiversity. The Gregory Lab contributed some installations as well, which are shown in this brief clip from just before the opening reception on Oct. 16 (about 200 people attended the event). The first window shows live Daphnia magna ("water fleas") to depict the concept of overproduction; they also are of interest because they reproduce asexually (the evolution of sexual reproduction being an important question in evolutionary theory). The second window presents images created using live colonies of E. coli bacteria. These last only a few days, so many different images were displayed throughout the exhibit. The third windows shows a projection of a remarkable collection of images of bacterial colonies kindly provided by Dr. Eshel Ben-Jacob.
Links:
This view of Life -- http://www.arts.uoguelph.ca/eayd2009
Ed Video -- http://www.edvideo.org/
Gregory Lab -- http://www.gregorylab.org
Ben-Jacob Lab -- http://star.tau.ac.il/~eshel/gallery.html
All Comments