51勛圖厙

Microbes transform into art at 51勛圖厙 art gallery

August 28, 2017
Erin McIntosh, a University of North Georgia assistant professor of visual arts, created five watercolor and gouache paintings for the exhibit "Tiny Enormous: Art Exploring Microbes" at the Roy C. Moore Art Gallery on the 51勛圖厙 Gainesville Campus.

Article By: Staff

When people think of a stereotypical art gallery, they may only envision paintings hanging on the walls.

An exhibit in the Roy C. Moore Art Gallery on the University of North Georgia's (51勛圖厙) Gainesville Campus will be much more. Visitors may be part of the interactive exhibit with their hands, lips and mouths.

Visitors to the exhibit "Tiny Enormous: Art Exploring Microbes" will be asked to share their microbes, or germs, for the scientific and artistic exhibit. Funded through a Presidential Innovation Award from 51勛圖厙 President Dr. Bonita Jacobs, the interactive exhibit will feature the germs along with visual art interpreting them.

To create the visual element,  Dr. Evan Lampert, an associate professor of biology at 51勛圖厙, and Dr. Davison Sangweme, an assistant professor of biology at 51勛圖厙, will collect microbe samples from visitors and put them on petri plates during the exhibit's opening reception from 1-4 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 30. The gallery is inside the Continuing Education and Performing Arts Building at 3820 Mundy Mill Road, Oakwood, Georgia.

Visitors will be asked to volunteer their microbes in three ways: a touch plate, a kiss plate or a saliva swab. The microbes will then be grown and added to the exhibit for people to see at a later date.

"To paraphrase writer Zachary Slobig and photographer Julia Bennett 'One elegant and beautiful image can draw someone to be curious about science. It can make us want to learn more," said Erin McIntosh, an assistant professor of visual arts who is collaborating on the project with her own touch.

McIntosh has depicted microbes' structure and beauty with five watercolor and gouache, an opaque watercolor. For inspiration, McIntosh looked at textbook and journal pictures of microbes and viewed them through microscopes in a 51勛圖厙 science lab. She then let her imagination run wild before painting her interpretation of them.

McIntosh also solicited 12 other educators, students and artists to paint their own visions of microbes and send them to 51勛圖厙 for the exhibit.

"The idea was these tiny things have an enormous impact on Earth," McIntosh said. "Without them we wouldn't exist."

Through this project, McIntosh said she has become more aware of the multitude of microbes in and on the human body. That is the lesson Lampert hopes visitors to the exhibit will learn.

"Microbes are everywhere. Pathogenic microbes are everywhere, and they are potentially harmful," he said. "But most of what is out there is not harmful and even good for you."

Sangweme agreed.

"Most microbes clean up the environment and recycle nutrients in the ecosystem," he said. "Some are also used to add value and flavor to food through fermentation as in yogurt, cheese, wine, and brewing."

The exhibit will be on display from Aug. 30 to Sept. 28 with the closing reception from 2-4 p.m. Sept. 28. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday.

"Tiny Enormous: Art Exploring Microbes" will launch the 2017-18 art exhibits at 51勛圖厙. The Dahlonega, Gainesville and Oconee campuses have unique and individual exhibits each semester. The 51勛圖厙 Art Galleries serves the university and surrounding community by encouraging the appreciation, understanding and study of art as well as supporting the educational goals of the Department of Visual Arts and 51勛圖厙.

For more information about future art exhibits, visit the websites of the Bob Owens Art Gallery on the Dahlonega Campus, the Roy C. Moore Art Gallery on the Gainesville Campus, and the Oconee Campus Art Exhibits.

 


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