Toshihiko Katsuda, a reporter for the ASAHI Shimbun, visited us at the Museum of Arts and Design during the World Science Festival. He took lots of photos and asked great questions.We just received this PDF of the story he published, entitled "Artistic E. Coli". I was delighted... or at least, I thought maybe I could be? An unusual situation. I replied, "Looks great! ... but uh, What does it say??" He humored me. For the translation, read below. Thank you Toshi!
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Amoeba to Zebra July 1 - July 25
Very happy to have a chance to reinstall, anew, "The many (still) lives of E. coli" -- a set of our prints at the 440 Gallery (440 6th Ave in Park Slope, at 9th Street). Many thanks to Gail and Todd (he is pictured here) for helping me get it on the wall! And thanks to Ylva Rouse for selecting this piece for the show.
Come out and enjoy the opening, Thursday July 1 from 6-9!
Come out and enjoy the opening, Thursday July 1 from 6-9!
Labels:
440 Gallery,
bio-art,
E. coli,
Ylva Rouse
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Our Day at the Museum of Arts and Design
Here are fabulous students from Ms. Shu's class at the Juan Morel Campos school printing and painting designs to E. coli! They began by printing to paper the many images I'd already cultivated on stacks of petri dishes. (I'm demo-ing this above). Then they turned their attention to making their own original designs, applying the clear solutions of E. coli to the agar plates we'd prepared. After the prints dried, they sealed and mounted these in clean petri dishes; 2 students created a sculpture from the mounted prints. Lots more great photos below the jump!
Monday, June 14, 2010
Take a Look at the World Science Festival Blog
Molly Webster, the tireless producer of our Bio-Art program at the Museum of Arts and Design, has learned an awful lot about what goes into creating prints from cultured, hand-painted genetically-engineered blue E. coli bacteria. It's been great to read how someone with a bit more artistic-remove describes our work -- check our her two posts from our festival week here.
Thank you so much for all your help and spirited words Molly! Stay tuned for pictures of finished work soon to come...
Thank you so much for all your help and spirited words Molly! Stay tuned for pictures of finished work soon to come...
Labels:
bacteria,
bio-art,
E. coli,
monoprint,
World Science Festival
Monday, May 31, 2010
Join Us at the World Science Festival!
Once again, we will be offering an educational program at the World Science Festival. Come see us onThursday, June 3, 2010, 3:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Museum of Arts and Design
Ms. Emily Shu's art students from the Juan Morel Campos High School will be learning about microbiology as they spend the afternoon painting their own designs in bacteria, and printing other designs cultivated the day before by Amy. Throughout the program, the public is invited to visit the Museum's Open Studio, to observe the printing and painting process.
Ms. Emily Shu's art students from the Juan Morel Campos High School will be learning about microbiology as they spend the afternoon painting their own designs in bacteria, and printing other designs cultivated the day before by Amy. Throughout the program, the public is invited to visit the Museum's Open Studio, to observe the printing and painting process.
Special thanks to Katayoun Chamany, Associate Professor at Eugene Lang College, for providing lab space and support!
Labels:
bacteria,
bio-art,
E. coli,
monoprint,
World Science Festival
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Hudson River Museum - Talk & Workshop
Since painting with bacteria requires 12-18 hours in an incubator to see the designs emerge, I instead asked teachers to experiment with 5 "mystery" materials to create opportunities to discover the properties of these liquids, much as i had to do as an artist, wor
When mixed in certain combinations, participants found that these mystery materials created surprising effects. Their task was to discover those effects, identify the materials, and use them to create works of art.
Thank you to Saralinda Lichtblau for inviting me up to share our work!
Monday, June 15, 2009
World Science Festival Street - What Grows?
Thank you to everyone who visited our tent at the World Science Festival Street Fair on Sunday -- and a special thanks to the 200+ artists who contributed drawings (or written ideas) to our Impressions of Growing collective art project. We will be very VERY busy in the lab growing your ideas in e. coli over the summer! Check back (or subscribe to our blog) for updates on our progress... and our plans to share this work with you. See more photos from the festival below...*Annie, Lissa & Ivory... our deepest thanks, we couldn't have done it without you!
Printing Day at the Harlem DNA Lab
| photo by joey o'laughlin |
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Harlem DNA Lab - World Science Festival
As part of the World Science Festival's outreach events, we introduced our living paint to 9th graders from the Thurgood Marshall Academy. Thanks to our host, Ileana Rios and the Harlem DNA Lab (a project of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) students learned how to perform a genetic transformation of e.coli bacteria (each making their own version of our "paint") and everyone made 8-10 bacterial paintings. We can't wait to see how the images grow -- all will be revealed on Friday when we return to print our work! Check back for updates.
Friday, May 22, 2009
Talk at the Brooklyn Museum of Art
Installation Images from Serrano Contemporary
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Upcoming Exhibition - Growing Impressions
Translating Bacteria Prints to Cyanotypes

Very excited about learning this old fashioned photographic process - using the sun to make contact prints from a "negative".
I've selected some of the bacterial prints, which are typically small on 2, 4 or 6 inch circles... and enlarged these onto transparency material using a photocopier. Then... waiting for a strong sunny day to printed these onto paper i've sensitized. The one above happens to be very dark... others come out much lighter, depending on the strength of the sun and length of exposure time.
Monday, August 13, 2007
It all Began with this Piece
Dr. Kristin Baldwin was given this piece for her birthday. I made it by laying down threads in thick blankets of glue, and was exploring things two lines might do without touching. And it got her thinking... and next thing I know, she had proposed creating a living paint -- a strain of bacteria that she modified to turn blue when it comes in contact with another chemical -- a chemical I can paint with on petri dishes.
The first handoff
We did our first experiment up at her lab at Columbia one evening in December of 2005-- here she is the following evening, after the plates had had a day in the incubator, handing them off to me so I can go print them up in my apartment. The blurred movement is her demonstrating how to quickly lift off the piece of filter paper to get a good print.
The first plates and prints
December 05 - This is what grew and was printed. I substituted heavy printing paper for the more delicate lab-filter paper and that worked well. I sealed the bugs onto the paper with cytoseal (acrylic resin normally used to seal specimens on glass slides). These prints were beautiful to me -- with distinct colonies of transformed (blue) ecoli and unaltered ecoli (translucent/white) visible. The only problem was that no trace of my hand or brush stroke was visible. Not yet quite the 3-way collaboration we had in mind (scientist, nature, artist). Back to the lab.
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