Showing posts with label prairie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prairie. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

Hetero-Types: Electron Microscope Tour

I'm late with this, it happened over a week ago, but... the tour with the Hetero-Types show to the Engineering Research Center's scanning electron microscope went really well! It was David Rosenthal, Laura Fisher, a couple other photographers from DAAP, and me. Dr. Rosales and his graduate assistant Manna were very accommodating with us, they didn't even mind us yelling "TAKE THAT PICTURE" every few seconds.

The best part for me, though, was helping Dr. Rosales prepare the samples. In order to be properly viewed by a scanning electron microscope, samples must be conductive--in this case, coated with a gold-palladium alloy. Samples were cut down, affixed to carbon tape, and placed in a vacuum chamber. Electricity was run through the gold-palladium, which caused it to vaporize and settle on the samples (it also glowed purple, which was cool to see).When I was smaller I had a kid's microscope, complete with slides, and I got rather good at putting together various organic and inorganic slides. So I really enjoyed putting on gloves and cutting little finicky bits of things and using tweezers to settle them just so on the dime-sized sample holders.

Actually viewing them in the microscope was something else, though. One of the samples was a fresh leaf from my creeping charlie houseplant. The leaf was fresh enough to still retain water--which made it more vulnerable to disintegration.The higher the magnification, the more focused the beam of electrons becomes. If the sample is improperly coated, or if it retains too much water, it will start to disintegrate. Which is what happened here.


The other samples were: a housefly, a lacewing fly, the inside of a seed pod, a gingko leaf and a butterfly wing.



This is (presumably) pollen, caught on a fly's back.


Flies are hairy, hairy bugs.


Closeup of a gingko leaf.


Scales of a butterfly wing.


Broken scale on a butterfly wing.


The spongy inside of a seed pod.

All the magnifications are specified on the images. These are not all the images, just the ones I liked best. All 26 can be viewed on my Photobucket account if you want to see more.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Hetero-Types Opening!

Oh my goodness gracious. Prairie Gallery's show Hetero-Types: Science in Contermporary Art-Making is opening on Saturday! Yes, this is the show I co-curated with David Rosenthal. It's been a fun time. I'm actually heading out right now to do last-minute things like labels and price lists. Anyone in the Cinci area should come. The show is sponsored by Yelp, so you can probably find it here.





 
presented by:
 
 
 
Three artists explore the use of scientific imaging techniques in producing photography, painting and video.
 
Opening Reception Saturday November 12, 7-9 pm
 
 
Northside Second Saturday features special events and exhibitions at:
Comet, Nvision, Thundersky, Chicken Lays an Egg, Helltown Workshop, Sidewinder, Cryptogram, Mayday, Northside Surplus, Fabricate, Prairie, CANCO, Take the Cake, Sweat Peace Bakery, Painted Fish, 3 Legged Dog, Shop Therapy, Northside Tavern (5-9 happy hour), Ruttle and Neltner Florist
 
Prairie is pleased to present work by Cincinnati artist Kimberly Burleigh, San Francisco artist Caren Alpert and Arizona artist David Tinapple. Kimberly Burleigh employs a unique blend of methods from both fields of art and science in producing her oil paintings and watercolors. She explores her interest in the behavior of light across the surface of and through liquids by creating computer simulated models of liquid surfaces lit by artificial light sources. She then transfers these "still lives" onto canvas using the traditional methods and tools of oil painting. Her final works are, in one sense, straight recordings of computer generated shapes, and in another, highly stylized abstractions of the real world rendered with limited color palettes which evoke the experiments of mid-20th century color field painters.
Caren Alpert, "Cake Sprinkles"
San Francisco artist Caren Alpert produces microscopic images of food in addition to her work as a commercial photographer. In producing images of food for the advertising industry, Alpert recognized an increasing disparity between the unnatural eating behaviors promoted through advertisements and a more balanced relationship between people and their food supply based on a comprehensive understanding of the origin and nature of food. For her, placing a "camera" close enough to edible objects to see their microscopic structures became a way to better understand food. The natural fibers and visual patterns present in the structure of certain vegetables shown in Alpert's images are not only beautiful, but transform objects of consumption into objects which invite admiration and contemplation. In a similar fashion, her images of cake sprinkles and other manufactured foods provide reason to reconsider the casual consumption of substances whose appearance evokes food science and genetic engineering laboratories.
David Tinapple sheds light on how human perception has been dramatically altered by the type and quantity of media which pervades our lives. Part engineer, he employs manipulated image capturing devices to produce video and still images which are visually stunning and which also question our reliance on imagery as a substitute for observation and experience of the real world. His "slit scan" images, for example, were produced by turning his car into a giant scanner. Equipped with this oversized imaging device, Tinapple drove his car down typical house-lined streets, capturing every detail of these bucolic scenes over the course of several minutes per image. On their own, these pictures appear to be simple panoramic photographs capturing a single moment in time. When the nature of their origin is understood, however, the idea of the photograph as a representation of the real world feels like a grand deception. Tinapple's perfectly still images showing people interacting with each other and the environment are actually the product of a narrative fabricated by his inventive imaging techniques.
  
Scanning Electron Microscope Image by Hyo-Jick Choi
 
 
Learn about and use UC's Scanning Electron Microscope on November 18.
 
In conjunction with Heterotypes: Science in Contemporary Art Making, Prairie will offer an interactive tour of the Scanning Electron Microscope Facility at UC's College of Engineering. Participants will learn about the capabilities of the microscope and will be allowed to choose from a variety of samples on hand at the lab to examine with the microscope. Participants will be able to download and save images from the visit for their own use.
The tour will begin at 12:00 at Room 316 of the Engineering Research Center on UC's Main Campus and will conclude at 1:00 pm. Registration is limited to 10! A reservation fee of $20 must be received in order to hold your spot!
 
 
 
 
Hope to see you there! (Text copied from Prairie press release.)

Saturday, August 13, 2011

My computer is home!

Yaaay! I had to have the logicboard thingie replaced, since it just up and died on me... but now I can post photos and write the rest of my proposal for the Prairie show and waste time on tumblr and watch Mystery Science Theater 3000 again!

HUZZAH!




As for artworks... I've been on vacation the last ten days or so, but I did do a little series of tiny ink drawings in my sketchbook as well as a schematic drawing of a sandwich. So eventually I suppose I'll get around to scanning those and posting them. I also took a good many pictures, but with a film camera. I did take some digital images with my cell phone and with my dad's full-frame Nikon, but I have to go through them and edit them so they'll follow in another post.

Work for the show (which might be called something like Hetero-types) is progressing, artists are being collected and negotiated with, I'm meeting with David Rosenthal on Monday to discuss things.

Tonight is The Denton Affair's production of Cry-Baby, which hopefully will be a great time. We've done a pretty good job with costumes and props, I think. I made a car muffler out of a giftwrap tube and some cardboard yesterday and I even figured out how to make my hair do this:


Following are some pictures from my cell phone that I did get uploaded, but more will follow (and be posted on my tumblr, which is slightly more active than this blog, hah).





Sunday, June 12, 2011

Schooool's out!

Alice Cooper isn't quite right on this one, I've got a year left... but hey. Summer.

Things that will be happening this summer: I will continue making comics (albeit more sketchy, journal-y ones). I will maybe do some Japanese tutoring. My sister will be in a production of Rigoletto as a supernumerary actor. I will be co-curating a show with David Rosenthal of Prairie Gallery. I will be in a shadow cast for John Waters' Cry-Baby (I'm playing Dupree) in August.

DAAPworks this year was pretty spectacular. I'll just let you see for yourself. I tried to document as much as I could. (I'm so proud of the people who had comics, my friends Alex and David, as well as Dan--there have been comics as thesis projects in the past and these were by far the best I've seen).

Mike about to grope the comics display.


Carol Tyler (in the pink) organizing things.

Amanda reading our kramer's ergot pages.






Performance.

Work by Alex Hananel (in the black frames).

Work by Laura Fisher.

Laura Fisher's photo booth.







Work by Dan Wolff.

Work by David Miranda-Klein.

Work by Jacob Riddle.

Work by Michelle Ulmer.



Work by Caitlin Robinson.




Work by Chris Thompson.


And of course there was so much more. I just didn't get pictures of it all.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Selling a piece and other shenanigans

So someone (a friend, but still) asked to buy one of my instax photos. This one, to be exact:

Now I have no problems selling this (after I get a better scan of it from the big DAAP scanners, not my little HP)... but I have no idea what to price it. Especially between friends. Suggestions? It is a VERY small photo, about the size of a credit card.

In other news, I finally got around to scanning some of the daily comics I've been doing, so they're all available on my tumblr. (Also on my tumblr, continuing work on my YouTube photography.)


Check them out! (Click!)