黑料不打烊

Skip to main content
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Arts & Culture
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
Sections
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Arts & Culture

The Art of Science: Students Participate in University’s First-Ever Bio-Art Class

Friday, July 8, 2022, By Dan Bernardi
Share
College of Arts and SciencesCollege of Engineering and Computer ScienceCollege of Visual and Performing ArtsDepartment of BiologyfacultyStudents

Somewhere deep inside a laboratory on the 黑料不打烊 campus, students gather in a dark room, the only light coming from the glow of a computer. The pixels on the screen visualize an up-close view of a cell, uncovering a striking, never-before-seen image full of vibrant colors. This must be a course just for science majors, right? Think again!

student viewing microscopy images in a dark room on a computer screen

Biotechnology major Madison Montalvo uses advanced microscopy to view the carnivorous plant Cape Sundew (Drosera capensis).

In Bio-Art (BIO 400/600 and TRM 500), cross-listed between the (A&S) and the (VPA), STEM students join art majors in a first-of-its-kind course at 黑料不打烊, 颅颅where students explore and create their own bio-art.

Offered for the first time in spring 2022 and co-taught by Biology Professor and Film and Media Art Professor , the course included students from VPA, the College of Engineering and Computer Science, A&S鈥 Departments of Physics and Biology, and from the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. The unique collaborative structure promotes cross-pollination of skillsets鈥攚here scientists gain valuable tools from artists, such as art theory, semiotics, image processing and video editing, and in return artists learn new scientific methods from STEM faculty and students, including microscopy and genomics. The result is visually inspiring art rooted in science that tells a personal story.

The Motivation

portraits of Boryana Rossa (left) and Heidi Hehnly (right)

Film and Media Arts Professor Boryana Rossa (left) and Biology Professor Heidi Hehnly co-taught 黑料不打烊’s first bio-art class.

Bio-art first came to the University in 2018, when Rossa and Hehnly established the Bio-Art Mixer in collaboration with the in VPA鈥檚 Department of Film and Media Arts. The open forum includes faculty, graduate students and members of the general public from different scientific and artistic backgrounds who share innovative research, foster ideas for new art and research projects, and view new science-inspired artworks from leading bio-artists from around the world.

鈥淏oryana and I believe that there is much benefit to bringing artists and scientists together in a public forum,鈥 says Hehnly. Similar to how artists use imagination to conceive ideas for their work, she explains that scientists use creativity and self-expression when developing a hypothesis and carrying out studies.

鈥淪cientific research is a form of creative expression, but much of the time communication of scientific data to the public typically emphasizes utility above aesthetics,鈥 says Hehnly. Bio-art disrupts that notion, celebrating the physical beauty of science while providing a space for productive dialogue.

鈥淗istorically, arts and sciences have been always related,鈥 Rossa says. 鈥淲hen an artist employs biological protocols and techniques used in the lab for the creation of an artwork, there are other layers of creative and intellectual exchange opened. Two fields that rarely look at each other are put in the same territory and can observe their field from a very different perspective and rediscover their terminology, which opens a gate for large debates and for collaborations.鈥

The growing popularity of the Bio-Art Mixer inspired Rossa and Hehnly to organize a class built on the same tenets. Hehnly says the ability to recognize alternative points of view is critical to scientists because it is fundamental for establishing successful communication of research to a wide audience.

鈥淭his is specifically important during the pandemic, when many people and societal entities question scientific research dedicated to the disease and to vaccine development,鈥 she says.

The class was a chance for students to not only get excited about the natural world, but also work with their peers to view their own scientific research and art projects through a new and potentially unconventional lens.

Learning the Bio-Art Basics

The semester started with an introduction to the field of bio-art, where students learned about the work of acclaimed international bio-artists. They even sat in on a Bio-Art Mixer featuring Guy Ben-Ary, the inventor of cellF, which is the world鈥檚 first that contains a 鈥渂rain鈥 made of a biological neural network that grows in a Petri dish and controls in real time an array of analog modular synthesizers.

Rossa and Hehnly also welcomed visiting and showing artists to the class throughout the semester. Students participated in a workshop with artist Adam Zaretsky from Ionian University in Greece. Zaretsky had the class take on the role of bioethicists, science fiction writers and bio-art critics to write a short piece about advances in genetics. They were also introduced to the artist Paul Vanouse鈥檚 (University at Buffalo) award-winning work 鈥淟abor鈥 2019, which reflects upon industrial society鈥檚 shift from human and machine labor to increasingly pervasive forms of microbial manufacturing. Artist Jennifer Willet also presented her project 鈥淏aroque Biology,鈥 a series of photographs in which microbial 鈥渁ctors鈥 take part in 鈥渕elodramatic ecological interspecies performances.鈥

After a handful of lectures and artist presentations, students conceived and pitched their own bio-art project ideas to Hehnly and Rossa, drawing inspiration from their journeys as scientists and artists. Their ideas were motivated by their own interactions with nature, perspectives on their own identity, struggles with human disease and their views of humanity, to name a few. Once project ideas were approved, the hands-on work began.

Student working with flowers in a lab

Madison Paris, a forensic science major, uses flowers as inspiration for her work, 鈥淔lower Portraits.鈥

Students used biological samples and techniques that can be found in advanced STEM fields and transformed them into traditional illustrations, paintings or murals.

The students learned the fundamentals of light microscopy in Hehnly鈥檚 lab with the help of researchers Mike Bates, Nikhila Krishnan, Favour Ononiwu, Abrar Aljiboury and Debadrita Pal. They captured stunning images from an array of samples, including those found in the natural world, research studies, aspects of their self or medicinal agents that occur every day in their lives. They also had access to advanced microscopy techniques in the and in A&S Professor Carlos Castaneda鈥檚 laboratory.

Once the microscopy work was done, students took part in drawing classes to illustrate the images they captured in the lab.

鈥淒rawing has always been connected with biology and with other sciences, especially before the appearance of photo imaging,鈥 says Rossa. 鈥淭he process of drawing is a method of understanding what we see. It is a form of knowledge.鈥

In addition to helping students shape their projects into visual displays, Rossa instructed them on how to talk about their work publicly鈥攕omething that may be common for art majors but was a new challenge for the STEM students.

鈥淲e had two very different types of presentations, that were nevertheless in a dialogue,鈥 Rossa says. The art by STEM students was based off their original research, engaging general audiences in diverse aspects of science. The art students grew living organisms and used microscopy to explore questions of their interest concerning subjectivity, connection between people and environment, suffering, transformation, joy, identity and more.

The course culminated with the first on-campus bio-art exhibition at 黑料不打烊 that was part of a series titled “Chimera.” In Greek mythology, Chimera is a hybrid consisting of a lioness鈥 body, a head of a goat protruding from her back and a tail ending with a snake head. Rossa says this title embodies the chimerical manner in which arts and sciences contribute to each other in the displayed projects. The exhibition was on view in the Shaffer Art Building in April.

Views from Chimera

series of three pieces of bio-art titled "As above, so below"

Biology doctoral student Elise Krespan’s triptych work titled 鈥淎s above, so below,鈥 shows 鈥渢he unseen world of plants, mapping the architecture, transportation and residents within their cities. The complexity of the plant world mirrors and interweaves with the complexity of the human world鈥︹

exhibition of "A Self-Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man鈥

“A Self-Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,鈥 by photography graduate student Anshul Roy explores the 鈥渢heme of selfhood and how we construct it by analyzing our bodies鈥 by juxtaposition of microscopic and macroscopic self-portraits.

An Inspiring Journey

portrait of Renita Saldanha

Renita Saldanha

Renita Saldanha, a graduate student in the Department of Physics, was intrigued to see how peers from different disciplines view the scientific images she works with on a daily basis.

鈥淚t was really fascinating for me as some of my colleagues from the course saw some details in the microscopy images which I generally miss out on because it may not be very important from a scientific perspective,鈥 says Saldanha, whose physics research focuses on vimentin intermediate filaments, a network of proteins in the cell that protect the nucleus against deformation during cellular migration.

Saldanha鈥檚 project, titled “The Lab Notebook,” presented a behind-the-scenes look at a scientist鈥檚 diary鈥攖he daily log a researcher keeps which notes details of their experiments, successes and failures, and the progress that may lead up to an exciting discovery.

鈥淭he bio-art class allowed me to talk about the life of a researcher and the thought process which goes into building up a new idea,鈥 she says. 鈥淎s a passionate microscopist, I wanted viewers to appreciate the beauty of fluorescence microscopy, where you can visualize a cell with sub-micron-level (less than one millionth of a meter) detail.鈥

Saldanha鈥檚 project included two parts. The first was an excerpt from her written log noting her daily lab activities as well as ethical dilemmas that may arise while using live cell line cultures in research.

bio-art by Renita Saldanha titled "The Lab Notebook"

Saldanha鈥檚 project, “The Lab Notebook,” presented a behind-the-scenes look at a scientist鈥檚 diary.

The second part of Saldanha鈥檚 exhibition was a compilation of vibrant artworks of various shapes and colors that emanated from images captured by high-powered microscopes. Works included a collection of cells arranged as a symmetric flower with fluorescently labeled microtubules, microtubules in a cell arranged in the form of a mask, an image of a dividing cell with fluorescently labeled vimentin filaments and an original drawing of a motor protein transporting cargoes along the microtubules inside the cell, which she describes as a 鈥渕olecular dance floor.鈥

The Body as a Landscape

For Oksana Kazmina 鈥24, an art video major in VPA, her mural titled 鈥淒ead(ly) Landscapes or I Myself Should Become All Places I Loved鈥 depicted her body as a landscape, examining how the war in Ukraine and destruction of lands affect personal identity. The work was based off her personal artistic interest in exploring the human body as an unfolding event, conditioned by culture, class, geography, gender and other factors while also versatile and able to shift.

mural project by Oksana Kazmina titled 鈥淒ead(ly) Landscapes or I Myself Should Become All Places I Loved鈥

Oksana Kazmina鈥檚 mural titled 鈥淒ead(ly) Landscapes or I Myself Should Become All Places I Loved.鈥

Her project was inspired by images of bacterial colonies she captured from her body using high-powered microscopes in the lab. 鈥淭he photographs reminded me of a photo of landscapes in Ukraine taken by military drones,鈥 she says. For Kazmina, the dark and desolate images of bacterial colonies bore a marked resemblance to images illustrating the stupefying destruction and scorched landscape in Ukraine.

鈥淭he war (in Ukraine) is stealing our landscapes as a lot of places will be inaccessible for years due to the mines, while others are taken or erased,鈥 says Kazmina, a native of Ukraine. 鈥淲ar is also stealing our time. When objects, places and people are destroyed, killed or violently extracted, emptiness is created instead.鈥

Kazmina says observing the daily growth of her bacterial colonies is confirmation that time exists, and that the physical and emotional emptiness in the wake of war is not permanent. Her mural mapped the journey of her mind through her body in what she refers to as an imaginary walk鈥 a sensual experience of recognizing and remembering places and yourself in the places.

鈥淚dentity, which is a sum of some repeated bodily practices, rituals, experience, embodied memory, relation to space and time鈥攑ast, present and future鈥攁ll of this becomes emptiness [during war],鈥 she says. By evoking memories through her art, Kazmina explains that her project is a way to affirm personal identity.

Diverse Perspectives

According to Hehnly and Rossa, one of their favorite aspects of the class was observing the dichotomy between how artists and scientists viewed and analyzed images. They say lively discussions would often arise among students concerning what 鈥渓ife鈥 is or if scientific images are randomly colored or carry certain cultural, psychological or even physiological bias.

Hehnly recalls a moment of collaboration between a graduate VPA student and an undergraduate biology student who were imaging their samples together that exemplifies the goals of the course.

鈥淏oth (samples) were visually beautiful under the microscope, and the students were discussing their perspectives on how it looked and what it could mean, while also helping each other obtain images from their studies,鈥 says Hehnly. 鈥淎s a microscopist, there鈥檚 something special about showing your samples of an image that you may have never seen before. When you can share this experience with someone else that is experiencing the same thing it can induce an infectious excitement for understanding and visualizing the natural world. These are the interactions that I treasure from courses like this.鈥

Hehnly and Rossa are hopeful to once again offer the class in spring 2024 and encourage anyone interested in learning more about bio-art to attend an upcoming .

The bio-art exhibition and class were supported by a CUSE Seed Grant, the Department of Film and Media Arts and the Department of Biology.

  • Author

Dan Bernardi

  • Recent
  • Katsitsatekanoniahkwa Destiny Lazore 鈥26 Receives Prestigious Udall Scholarship
    Tuesday, June 17, 2025, By Jen Plummer
  • WiSE Hosts the 2025 Norma Slepecky Memorial Lecture and Undergraduate Research Prize Award Ceremony
    Friday, June 13, 2025, By News Staff
  • Inaugural Meredith Professor Faculty Fellows Announced
    Friday, June 13, 2025, By Wendy S. Loughlin
  • Lab THRIVE: Advancing Student Mental Health and Resilience
    Thursday, June 12, 2025, By News Staff
  • 7 New Representatives Added to the Board of Trustees
    Wednesday, June 11, 2025, By News Staff

More In Arts & Culture

黑料不打烊 Stage Concludes 2024-25 Season With ‘The National Pastime’

黑料不打烊 Stage concludes its 2024-25 season with the world premiere production of 鈥淭he National Pastime,鈥 a provocative psychological thriller about state secrets, sonic weaponry, stolen baseball signs and the father and son relationship in the middle of it all. Written…

黑料不打烊 Stage Hosts Inaugural Julie Lutz New Play Festival

黑料不打烊 Stage is pleased to announce that the inaugural Julie Lutz New Play Festival will be held at the theatre this June. Formerly known as the Cold Read Festival of New Plays, the festival will feature a work-in-progress reading and…

Light Work Opens New Exhibitions

Light Work has two new exhibitions, “The Archive as Liberation” and “2025 Light Work Grants in Photography, that will run through Aug. 29. “The Archive as Liberation” The exhibition is on display in the Kathleen O. Ellis Gallery at Light…

Spelman College Glee Club to Perform at Return to Community: A Sunday Gospel Jazz Service June 29

As the grand finale of the 2025 黑料不打烊 International Jazz Fest, the Spelman College Glee Club of Atlanta will perform at Hendricks Chapel on Sunday, June 29. The Spelman College Glee Club, now in its historic 100th year, is the…

Alumnus, Visiting Scholar Mosab Abu Toha G鈥23 Wins Pulitzer Prize for New Yorker Essays

Mosab Abu Toha G鈥23, a graduate of the M.F.A. program in creative writing in the College of Arts and Sciences and a current visiting scholar at 黑料不打烊, has been awarded the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for a series of essays…

Subscribe to SU Today

If you need help with your subscription, contact sunews@syr.edu.

Connect With Us

For the Media

Find an Expert
© 2025 黑料不打烊. All Rights Reserved.