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Ice Labyrinth: April 2014
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Tuesday, April 22, 2014. Art from Earned Objects. I was just notified of a grant award. Getting funded is an art, so I figure I should make art of some funds. My first attempt: An Origami Foraminifera. This must be the cell body . I wonder what it will agglutinate? Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Subscribe To Ice Labyrinth. View my complete profile. Paper doll fanzine (MFMM). All Finite Things Reveal Infinitude . . . TUESDAY POEM BIRD by Pablo Neduda.
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Ice Labyrinth: Updated Cereal Killer
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Friday, November 22, 2013. Art is never finished, only abandoned." This quote is credited to Leonardo da Vinci and it appears he's right. At the last minute I flipped all the metazoan prey upside down so they looked dead at the hands (er, arms) of. The piece was gifted to the staff of Health Research, Inc. after giving a talk about our research projects. They are displaying it in their lunch room, which seems fitting. . November 23, 2013 at 8:48 PM.
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Ice Labyrinth: Turning nomenclature on its side
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Thursday, February 13, 2014. Turning nomenclature on its side. Structural definitions imposed on a shelled protist. 65279; . One theme I've been touching on lately is that protists like forams use these "feet" for feeding as well as locomotion. Sort of like a dog holding a bone (or chewy chew treat) with its feet while it happily muches, belly on the floor.. 65279; I wonder if adding a little humor will help give kids get both the structural and functional concepts?
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Ice Labyrinth: January 2014
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Monday, January 13, 2014. Art/science collaboration - summary of some past work. I just completed another collaborative research proposal with some. Smart colleagues. The application includes a novel art/science collaboration to help promote scientific literacy. Let's hope it gets funded! While digging through the blogosphere to prepare my cv for the application, I came across a wonderful post that summarized a past project. 65279;. 65279;. Links to this post.
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Ice Labyrinth: Of Hearts and Red
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Tuesday, February 25, 2014. Of Hearts and Red. Our thoughts form us. And like the forams. And the caddis creatures. We live in our. I can run with this. Away from text and fact. And the common herded wayfare. Of thought and learned behaviour. It is too dense for me. I am overwhelmed already. And the truth of it. And snarls in the brambles. Of a forest of trees. I would rather drop my sounding bells. Below a frozen sea. And watch with my long distance heart. Turning n...
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Ice Labyrinth: Art from Earned Objects
http://icelabyrinth.blogspot.com/2014/04/art-from-earned-objects.html
Antarctica . where science meets art. Tuesday, April 22, 2014. Art from Earned Objects. I was just notified of a grant award. Getting funded is an art, so I figure I should make art of some funds. My first attempt: An Origami Foraminifera. This must be the cell body . I wonder what it will agglutinate? July 18, 2014 at 2:27 PM. I just read an article about National Geographic mapping plastics trash. Have you found any plastics in your exploration? Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Waters I Have Known.
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Ice Labyrinth: Surprise!
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Saturday, March 22, 2014. I'm following up on the previous post, where porcelain fragments were ground to dust and then viewed at various scales. We always seem to focus on that's in front of us when viewing porcelain objects. That is where the "action" is - the form and texture of the piece and, perhaps most importantly, the glazed image(s). How often do we bother looking at what's inside or behind an object? I never do.). Obverse of Christina's porcelain fragment.
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Ice Labyrinth: Seeing, Not Believing: Landscapes at Various Scales
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Antarctica . where science meets art. Thursday, February 27, 2014. Seeing, Not Believing: Landscapes at Various Scales. I've had the pleasure of collaborating with some amazing artists over the years. One of my favorites is South African ceramic artist Christina Bryer. Who wrote the poem recently posted here. Broken fragments of porcelain art donated by Katherine. Likewise, linear dimensions often baffle the mind. Under ideal conditions, most of us can see sub-millimeter objects. Smaller objects...I spr...
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Ice Labyrinth: Art/science collaboration - summary of some past work
http://icelabyrinth.blogspot.com/2014/01/artscience-collaboration-summary-of.html
Antarctica . where science meets art. Monday, January 13, 2014. Art/science collaboration - summary of some past work. I just completed another collaborative research proposal with some. Smart colleagues. The application includes a novel art/science collaboration to help promote scientific literacy. Let's hope it gets funded! While digging through the blogosphere to prepare my cv for the application, I came across a wonderful post that summarized a past project. 65279;. 65279;. Im interested in bio...