Lively countenances: face casts, now with active bacteria
Animated spirographs and bacterial portraits were among the projects under discussion at a seminar exploring the potential and the challenges of 鈥渋ntegrating art and science鈥 within learning.
Set up at the University of Westminster in 2010 as an extracurricular programme, the Broad Vision project brings together 30 to 35 arts and science students each year on Friday afternoons from January to April. Their very different knowledge and skill sets mean that everyone is both an expert and a novice, so they form into small groups to create science-inspired artworks. By the end of the very first year, in which a focus on microscopy was encapsulated in the theme The Art and Science of Looking, the collaborations had led to an exhibition, workshops, a seminar and a book.
After two successful trial years, Westminster turned the programme into an optional credit-bearing module for second-year students on a range of courses, with others attending on an extracurricular basis. Some of the results were presented at Learning Across Disciplinary Divides: Integrating Art and Science Through Emergent Curriculum Design, a Higher Education Academy seminar held on 20聽November.
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Benjamin Palmer (human and medical sciences) said he had expected that a collaboration with fellow final-year student Robbie Duncan (illustration and visual communication) would be 鈥渁 three-month tug of war, but it became a three-month relay race鈥 instead. The experience 鈥渃ompletely changed the way I looked at science, turning information into knowledge I could share with others鈥.
Mr Duncan described their efforts to make 鈥渟omething that would light up without using electricity鈥, which led him on to modelling images of coral reefs through animated spirographs. He stressed the value of 鈥渁n exchange of working environments鈥 and noted that 鈥渄onning a white coat makes you feel a little bit more of a scientist鈥. Even his memory stick was now much more organised, he added.
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Mark Clements, lecturer in biosciences at Westminster, and Mell Fisher, a recent graduate in illustration, recalled a Broad Vision taster session in which some science students demonstrated how to test the efficacy of antimicrobial gels by making before and after fingerprints in agar.
That led Ms Fisher to wonder, she told delegates, whether 鈥渋t was possible to make 3D sculptures out of agar鈥. Dr Clements had no idea but said his head of department 鈥渨ent pale when I said that a group of art students wanted to make agar sculptures with living bacteria鈥.
Nonetheless, they decided to try, making jelly moulds out of agar and then swabbing their ears, noses and eyebrows for bacteria. They went on to produce casts of their faces and smear them with microbes. These were put in an exhibition and three are on display in Dr聽Clements鈥 lab with the bacteria still growing, piquing colleagues鈥 curiosity.
The work, he said, 鈥渘ot only has artistic merit鈥 but 鈥渟cientific validity as well鈥 have been contacted by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, which is interested in developing this as a tool to educate the public on the issues of antibiotic resistance in bacteria鈥. Future plans include 鈥渁 full-body microbiological sculpture鈥.
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