Research as Art, take two

The second annual art competition in earth and planetary sciences and physics

Titled "Disruption," this landscape is a plot showing a localized distortion in quark matter, the densest form of matter, possibly found in the cores of neutron starts. The moon is a decorative addition.--Andreas Windisch.

The earth and planetary sciences and physics communities at Washington University in St. Louis gathered April 15 to consider their research from an aesthetic point of view, admiring the stylish results that sometimes emerge, often quite unexpectedly, from the elegant mathematics of physical processes or the slow sculptural forces of the living Earth.

Amanda Bender
Amanda Bender at the opening of Research as Art . (Photo: Danny Reise/Washington University)

It was the second annual art competition for the Arts & Sciences departments. The competition, begun last year by Martin Pratt, a graduate student in earth and planetary sciences, was organized this year by Amanda Bender, also a graduate student in earth and planetary sciences. Graduate students Kelsey Williams and Sarah Valencia and post-baccalaureate student Jeniffer Gil Acevedo, all in earth and planetary sciences, plus physics graduate student Adam Archibald, also helped with organizing.

Katharina Lodders, a research professor in earth and planetary sciences, stopped to view a photograph of gas chromatography columns (see below). “This one I find intriguing because there’s a nice composition and a color contrast,” she said.

“I personally take photos of all kinds of things, so I really like that somebody pays attention to something absolutely unimportant that you normally don’t pay attention to until the photographer tells you to look. It’s just something that looks interesting and is an everyday thing in the lab. Beauty can be in anything,” she said.

Andreas Windisch, creator of the moonscape above, at the opening of Research as Art. (Photo: Danny Resie/WUSTL Photos)
Andreas Windisch, creator of the moonscape above, at the opening of Research as Art. (Photo: Danny Reise/Washington University)

“Research as Art” was supported by the departments of Physics and Earth and Planetary Sciences, the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences, and the Geographic Information Systems office, which printed the images.

Here are the winners plus some other entries that caught our eye. Click on a tile to see a larger image and a caption. (Missing is Ryan Murphy’s Lego model of the SuperTiger cosmic ray detector, which won the Physics Faculty/Staff Award).

 

 

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