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"The Molecular Gaze: Art in the Genetic Age," Suzanne Anker & Dorothy Nelkin, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2003 "City Art: New York's Percent For Art Program," Eleanor Heartney, Merrell, 2005 "The Downtown Book: The New York Art Scene, 1974-1984," Marvin J. Taylor, Fales Library, Austin Museum of Art, Princeton University Press, 2006
But the theme is even longer: long as the genetical persistance of human memory. As announced by the prophet Isaiah—the Saviour contained in God's head from which one sees for the first time in the iconographic history his arms repeating the molecular structures of Crick and Watson and lifting Christ's dead body so as to resuscitate him in ...
In 2004, Suzanne Anker and Dorothy Nelkin's The Molecular Gaze also helped establish the integration of molecular biology with artistic practice. [27] [28] In 2015-2016 Amy Karle created Regenerative Reliquary, a sculpture of bio-printed scaffolds for human MSC stem cell culture into bone, in the shape of a human hand form installed in a vessel.
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Suzanne Anker (born August 6, 1946) is an American visual artist and theorist. Considered a pioneer in bioart, [1] she has been working on the relationship of art and the biological sciences for more than twenty five years.
George Anderson Lawson (portrait by Thomas Alexander Ferguson Graham) Burns memorial, Montreal George Anderson Lawson by J. P. Mayall from Artists at Home, photogravure, published 1884, Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC Robert the Bruce by George A Lawson, Scott Monument, Edinburgh
David Anderson (died 1847) was a Scottish statuary and painter, [1] [2] described by Art UK as being "renowned". [3] He was the father of sculptor William Anderson ...
The sculpture is composed of 1,200 blown-glass globes and weighs a total of 3,000 pounds. Each globe has a different texture and weighs between 1 and 2 pounds. The mauve, green and blue globes represent the four nucleobases, while the yellow globes represent the double helix, or sugar and phosphate group, to which the bases are attached.