Archive for January, 2006

recent biomed, news, jobs/grants

SymbioticA residency program

SymbioticA at the School of Anatomy and Human Biology, University of Western Australia, is an evolving place of artistic investigation that is accessible to people throughout Western Australia and beyond, offering artists-in-residence cutting edge technology and the ability to realise projects that involve scientific/biological experiments. See http://www.symbiotica.uwa.edu.au

recent biomed, news, conferences

Days of Bioart, Barcelona 15 - 17 Februar, 2006

SymbioticA Tissue Engineering and Art Workshop prepared by Oron Catts of SymbioticA - The Art & Science Collaborative Research Laboratory, Laboratories of the Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona.

Tissue culture and tissue engineering represent a new area for artistic engagement. These branches of biomedical research have a major influence on perceptions of body, self and medical thinking. Tissue engineering enable researchers to grow three dimensional living tissues constructs of varying sizes, shapes and tissue types.

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recent biomed, displays/exhibits, news, conferences

Seminars about biomedicine/biotechnology and art: Madrid 9 - 13 February 2006

Arte Contemporáneo arranges the following seminars on biomedicine / biotechnology and art in Madrid, 9 - 13 February 2006:
– “The Era of Posthuman Engineering” (presentation vs. participants),
– “From Body Art to the Transgenic Body” (participants vs. presentation) ,
– “The Posthuman Body: Hybridization Between Flesh and Prosthesis” (presentation vs. participants),
– “Biotechnology: the Theoreticians and the Artists” (presentation vs. participants),
– “Biotechnological Thinking” (presentation vs. participants), and
– “A Mutating Corporality” (presentation vs. participants).
For further information, see Arte Contemporáneo’s website.

general, displays/exhibits, new books etc

ISIS Focus: Museums and the History of Science

I mine desperate forsøg på at være først med noget som helst her på bloggen (eller bare at være på bloggen) er ingen nyhed for lille eller triviel. Continue Reading »

displays/exhibits, seminars

Protected: Seminar background text: “The impact of science on society since 1945: historiography and representation in a museum setting”

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displays/exhibits, news

Exhibition and seminar: ‘Medicine from art to science’, Nobel Museum, Stockholm

The Nobel Museum in Stockholm opens a new exhibition, ‘Läkekonst blir vetenskap’ (’Medicine from art to science’), Tuesday 28 March 2006. It’s not on their website yet, but soon …

displays/exhibits

Medical Museums that must be seen - part 4

Indtryk fra en studietur 18.-21. januar 2006
Studieturen gik til Berliner Medizinhistorischen Museum og til Deutschen Hygiene Museum i Dresden.
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recent biomed, Museion concept, conferences

Who’s afraid of the recent biomedical heritage?

Here’s the abstract and a link to the full paper “Who’s afraid of the recent biomedical heritage?” from the UMAC conference in Uppsala, September 2005.
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recent biomed, news, conferences

Endo-Ecto — art/science representations

Endo-Ecto is an interdisciplinary symposium on endoscopy and related themes organised by live artist Phillip Warnell (thanks to Centre for the History of Medicine, University of Warwick for telling us).

Endo-Ecto - Phillip Warnell
February 10, 2006, 3-8 PM
Nash Room, ICA, The Mall, London SW1

Presented by The Arts Catalyst, devised by Phillip Warnell — http://www.guestplushostequalsghost.com


(the pill camera)
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recent biomed, displays/exhibits, news, web resources

Medical museums that must be seen - part 3

In our series of posts about medical museums that must be seen (for earlier presentations, see here and here), the turn has now come to the on-line Museum of Scientifically Accurate Fabric Brain Art which “exhibits the world’s largest collection of anatomically correct fabric art inspired by research from neuroscience and dissection”. This “world’s largest” collection is on a single web page with four pics: three quilts with images from PET and MRI scannings and a knitted brain (which, by the way, reminds me of the human anatomical knittings by Arrmatie, see here).:

The ‘exhibition’ is created by Marjorie Taylor, Professor and Head of the Department of Psychology at the University of Oregon; she is otherwise mainly working on children’s imaginary companions.
(thanks to Mind Hacks, The Eyes Have It, Faustus, M.D., and Mymarkup)

acquisition, conservation, registration, conferences

Meeting: “Inventorying and preserving university collections – what for?”

Universeum meeting, Strasbourg, 22-24 June 2006
First announcement:
Inventorying and preserving university collections – what for?
During the last few years, due to a significant rise in concern about academic heritage, special attention has been given to university museums and collections. Numerous initiatives have emerged all over Europe, mainly focused on building databases, i.e. inventories made accessible online on more or less complex websites.
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displays/exhibits

Protected: Om at udstille anatomiske præparater på en ‘æstetisk’ måde …

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conferences

Conference: Science and the public: interdisciplinary approaches, 20 May 2006

Inaugural Science Communication Postgraduate Conference
Science and the Public: interdisciplinary approaches
Saturday, May 20th 2006, Imperial College, London

This day-long postgraduate conference has been organised by Imperial College and the London PUS Seminar Group to help bring together researchers from the disparate strands of academia that consider science as it exists and influences public life.

We hope to attract delegates from a wide variety of disciplines; bringing together researchers from science and technology studies, science communication, history, cultural studies, psychology, anthropology, literary criticism, education, museum studies, sociology, media studies, policy studies, geography and others.
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general, conferences

Konference “Representation in Art and Science”, London 22 - 23 June


(pic borrowed from: http://www.cs.utk.edu/~evers/think/mimesis/theory.htm)
‘Representation’ is not only a key concept in biomedicine, but also in museology and in the history of medicine. In all three realms the concept of ‘representation’ bridges the gulf between ‘pure’ science and ‘pure’ art. Scientific reports, historical narratives and exhibitions — all three transcend the neat dichotomy between culture as a mirror (of society or nature) and culture as construction (of society or nature). This conference could be an opportunity to develop further the notion of medical museology as a ‘boundary discipline ‘ between visual art, historiography and science:

Beyond Mimesis and Nominalism: Representation in Art and Science
Two-day conference in London, 22-23 June 2006
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