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a blog about the intersection of science, art, and culture by Jessica Palmer, PhD

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Jessica Palmer has a PhD in Molecular Biology and has been blogging about the intersection of art and biology since 2006.

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« Visualizing health care data: plain language, intuitive videos | Main | "Aesthetic enjoyment of dereliction" »

Delicate and lethal

Category: Artists & ArtBiologyScience
Posted on: September 6, 2009 3:26 PM, by Jessica Palmer

500x_Luke-Jerram-001-8.jpg

Via iO9, a gallery of stunning glass viruses by sculptor Luke Jerram, originally from the Guardian. (The one above is swine flu.)

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Comments

1

Wow...those were truly beautiful. They look so sort of brittle and breakable like that, as well as ultimately very cold and deadly.

I always thought it would be fun to make virus versions of those crystal-animals you find in airport shops. Expecially phages, which seem almost designed for it :)

Posted by: Lab Rat | September 7, 2009 10:13 AM

2

Marvelous. As someone with some minor proficiency in technical glass-blowing all I can say is "wow". They bring to mind the glass models in the Peabody collection.

Posted by: doug l | September 7, 2009 9:48 PM

3

Three points
Point 1: I particularly like the E. coli sculpture
Point 2: The detail is just incredible on these
Point 3: How have I avoided finding this blog for so long?

Posted by: Jared | September 10, 2009 10:31 PM

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