Walton sculpture unveiled - 'Apples and Atoms'
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| Apples and Atoms by Eilis O'Connell (Image: @TCDArtCurator) |
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| Ernest TS Walton |
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| Apples and Atoms by Eilis O'Connell (Image: @TCDArtCurator) |
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| Ernest TS Walton |
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 9:02 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, dublin, Ernest Walton, Nobel Prize, Physics, The Cradle, Walton
I love these - Famous scientists' names presented in a way that represents their most famous achievement. Designed by Kapil Bhagat of India, I spotted them on broadsheet.ie
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 4:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, scicomm, The Cradle
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 12:31 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, Eamon de Buitlear, film, Ireland, The Cradle, wildlife
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 4:03 PM 2 comments
Labels: art, Biodiversity, biology, Culture and Science, scicomm, The Cradle
Here's a promotional video for the Imagine Science Film Festival 2012. Shot by Rory Gavin over two days around Dublin, we think it's pretty cool. Producers of It's a Girl Thing: please take note.
The festival takes place from November 9-16 and you can find further information on their website.
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 3:29 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, film, imagine science film festival, scicomm, The Cradle
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 3:08 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, Dublin2012, ESOF2012, Robert Boyle, Robert Boyle Summer School, Stamps, The Cradle
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 3:24 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, STEAM, STEM, The Cradle
The labour of rising from the ground, said the artist, will be great, as we see it in the heavier domestic fowls; but, as we mount higher, the earth´s attraction, and the body´s gravity, will be gradually diminished, ´til we shall arrive at a region where the man will float in the air without any tendency to fall: no care will then be necessary, but to move forwards, which the gentlest impulse will effect.
—Samuel Johnson, 1759, The History of Rasselas
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| Johan Lorbeer in Cork (Image: Irish Independent) |
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| William Parson's sketch of the Whirlpool Galaxy |
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 9:06 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Cork, Culture and Science, gravity, Physics, Science Communication, Space, The Cradle, Willaim Parsons
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| William Crawford of Lakelands (Crawford Gallery Collection) |
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 7:58 AM 0 comments
Labels: art, Cork, Crawford, Culture and Science, Observatory, The Cradle, UCC
The Art of Science is a wonderful creative arts competition run by the Faculty of Medical and Veterinary Sciences at University of Bristol. Researchers are challenged to look for "aesthetic beauty in their experimental work".
This year's winners and a few of the runners-up are presented here to give you a flavour of what is submitted. I think it's a wonderful idea, something that could be replicated across many research institutes and universities.
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 10:04 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, Photo, The Cradle
Dr. Julian Pender Hume of the the London Natural History Museum, an artist and a palaeontologist, updates our view of the Dodo based on scientific evidence in this excellent video clip. The resultant painting will form part of the "Images of Nature" exhibition at the museum next year.
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 12:52 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, birds, Culture and Science, dodo, The Cradle
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 8:39 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, photograph, science, Snapshot
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 4:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: art, biology, education, microbiology, streptomyces, The Cradle
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| Robert Gibbings |
"Though it may take seven thousand years for some of the slower-growing corals to build a reef a hundred and fifty feet in depth, or perhaps a quarter of that time for some of the quicker-growing species to achieve the same result, nevertheless the activity goes on unceasingly.
And it is not only the exuberant growth of the living polyp which, ramifying everywhere, builds up these great structures. It is the dead coral also. broken by the waves and reduced to powder by boring molluscs and worms, this serves as cement to bind the whole together; and, burying themselves in it, there are shell-fish who in turn contribute their shells to the general structure. Over it all is deposited a gentle rain of sediment from the seawater. One day, when the living rock has reached the surface, a floating coco-nut will be arrested in its travels and, taking root, will throw up its leaves. Then begins another cycle. The leaves of the tree will fall and rot, forming humus, and in this humus other seeds, borne by the sea and wind, will take root. They in their turn will die and form further soil, and so a new world will come into being on which all the romance and tragedy of human life will find a setting."Robert Gibbings was born in Cork in 1889, the son of a Church of Ireland minister. His mother was the daughter of Robert Day, a noted Cork businessman and importantly, a collector of art and cultural objects from all over the world. Gibbings undoubtedly came under Day's influence in his formative years: Myrtle Hill, the Day family's home in Cork was full of strange objects, from Celtic gold torcs to spears from the South Sea Islands.
"It wasn't that there was any ill will between us (the professors at the college), it was just that they couldn't agree with my answers to their questions. The professor of zoology* lamented that I seemed more interested in the outside than the inside of a rabbit."
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| Engraving from 'Beasts and Saints' |
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| Engraving from 'Blue Angels &Whales' |
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| Gibbings diving in Bermuda |
"The pressure of the air within the helmet is kept up by the pump, operated from the launch overhead. Provided the man at the job does not go to sleep in the sun, there is sufficient pressure to prevent the water rising above chin level."
"a fanatical evangelist with a lovely wife. He has tried to convert me to his beliefs, I have tried to convert her to mine, so far, no score on either side."
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| Clownfish by Gibbings, from 'Blue Angels & Whales' |
"In among the crevices of the dead coral were giant anemones, among whose tentacles might be discovered a small fish marked with conspicuous white bars across its bronze body, which, either by long habit or by ‘gentleman's agreement' had gained immunity from the stinging cells of its host. Living as it does under cover of such a battery, it achieves a greater security from its enemies than it would have if dependent on its own resources. In order to repay the hospitality granted, it makes it its business to dart from cover and endeavour to lure or drive any passing stranger within reach of the tentacles. Should it be successful there is no lack of reward in the crumbs that fall from its host's table."
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 11:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: art, Cork, Culture and Science, Gibbings, Ireland, Robert Gibbings, The Cradle, UCC, University College Cork
Einstein wrote that "the most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious—the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science". With this in mind, today we begin a semi-regular series of postings on the topic of science and culture.
We start today with a nod to all of those who are currently sitting state examinations in Ireland or who have just finished. The science exams have begun and are being reviewed elsewhere. The higher-level English paper however included a poem by the Dublin poet Paula Meehan and is just the sort of thing that this series of posts will cover. As Einstein also said: "The greatest scientists are always artists as well"
Posted by Eoin Lettice at 10:07 AM 3 comments
Labels: art, Culture and Science, poetry, seed, The Cradle
Posted by SW at 10:33 AM 0 comments
Labels: art, London, poems, science, The Cradle
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