There’s a dinner on my spider

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dinner, salad, and dessert plates
Laura Zindel
Laura Zindel Ceramics

My friend Lorraine alerted me to this amazing ceramic tableware by Laura Zindel. Zindel says:

I believe that some objects can carry a personal history through a family from year to year. I hope that I can make art that a family member can buy to be handed down the line. Something bought on a whim, that becomes the platter for the turkey, or sits on the mantel. “Crazy old Uncle Larry bought that peculiar spider platter, and we just can’t seem to part with it”, I would like to be a part of that.

I’m far from squeamish, but I don’t know about those tarantulas. . . I love the snakes and beetles, though.

These patterns would rock a wedding registry – any entomologists/herpetologists getting married out there?

Thanks Lorraine!

Posted in Artists & Art, Biology, Frivolity, Wonder Cabinets | 6 Comments

Don’t be afraid to change your values

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Ocellated Antbirds value study
from Drawing the Motmot

I’m a naughty watercolorist: I don’t do value studies before I paint. I know they’re important – especially in watercolor, because you can’t paint over your mistakes. But I’m just too lazy to do a full-sized piece twice over, and it’s frustrating experimenting with values in a dinky little thumbnail sketch. With pencil, the value gamut is too narrow to represent the values of paint, and I get graphite all over my hand in the process (I’m a lefty). I quit bothering with studies long ago, and I know my work has suffered for it.

Drawing The Motmot has convinced me with this post to try value studies again – in Photoshop, where it’s trivial to create and compare several different studies, and you never have to struggle to get back to a pure, clean white, or to render a true black. This post is a great back-to-basics reminder of the importance of value studies, even if you’re lazy and self-trained, like I am.

PS. speaking of value studies, Today’s Inspiration just posted this brief tribute to Andrew Loomis, an early 20th century illustrator who worked largely in black and white. His works are goldmines for anyone interested in learning anatomy or value-based composition. Unfortunately, Loomis’ books are out of print and increasingly scarce, but you can find pdfs online, and this post links to some sources.

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Excerpt from “Rethinking Thin”

There is an excerpt from Gina Kolata’s new book, Rethinking Thin (Amazon), in today’s NYT Science section:

The implications were clear. There is a reason that fat people cannot stay thin after they diet and that thin people cannot stay fat when they force themselves to gain weight. The body’s metabolism speeds up or slows down to keep weight within a narrow range. Gain weight and the metabolism can as much as double; lose weight and it can slow to half its original speed.

That, of course, was contrary to what every scientist had thought, and Dr. Sims knew it, as did Dr. Hirsch.

I just got Rethinking Thin in the mail, and will hopefully post a few thoughts about it in the next week.

Posted in Books | 3 Comments

Popularity Contest!

I’ve just added Alex King’s Popularity Contest widget to the sidebar, so you can hop directly to bioephemera’s most read posts.

Unfortunately, the widget doesn’t accurately reflect the cumulative hits prior to today, so although the most of the listed posts really are my most popular ones, some of the rest are just the newest posts. However, it’s a good way to delve into the archives, which are getting surprisingly large. . .

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The Department of the Drama; or “wasn’t this supposed to be an art blog?”

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April was a cruel month indeed. I travelled round trip from West Coast to East Coast three times, in three consecutive weeks, with no more than two days between flights. That’s what one does when all the places where one might be spending the next several years extend invitations to visit, but in the most inopportune sequence possible. When I wasn’t in the airport or on a shuttle, I did get to see some lovely things – the header for this category is a find from deliciously gothic Yale. (I also saw their Gutenberg Bible, and Ralph Nader. Make of that juxtaposition what you will.)

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Posted in Department of the Drama | 1 Comment

The Self-Referential Quiz

This kinda reminded me of the LSAT. But in a good way.

This is the category
… for the logic-masters! Congrats, you did it: you totally rock! Since you got all the answers right, I hope you had a good time… please help me get more takers by giving this test a rating. Thanks!
My test tracked 1 variable How you compared to other people your age and gender:

free online dating free online dating
You scored higher than 99% on success

Link: The self-referential Test written by colakoala29 on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the The Dating Persona Test
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The battle between art and science begins (its US run)

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“Science-in-fiction” novelist/chemist Carl Djerassi’s play Phallacy marks its American premiere this month, hosted by Redshift Productions. The play’s teaser? “The battle between art and science begins.”

If I were in NYC I’d definitely go see this, although I’m not sure I ought to. Since reading Allegra Goodman’s Intuition last year, I’ve realized that portrayals of backbiting, self-absorbed academia leave me shuddering, even when they’re hilariously spot-on. It’s been a few years since grad school, but I’m still hypersensitive. (Will it ever go away?)
Like Intuition, Phallacy seems to be as much about the lead characters’ sex lives as their science. According to Jennifer Rohn’s review of the 2005 London production of Phallacy,

Still, it struck me that Otto, in being more preoccupied with getting into Emma’s pants than with analyzing Renaissance alloys, was quite reminiscent of many younger postdocs today, to whom science is an enjoyable job but not necessarily the be-all and end-all of existence. In this respect, he is probably the most post-modern scientist character that Djerassi has yet produced.

I hope that’s true (that Otto enjoys science – whether or not he gets into Emma’s pants). I’ve seen too many postdocs and graduate students who did not enjoy it, yet kept at it, as if science were a dismal relationship preferable only to the distasteful revelations of a break-up. Djerassi at least seems to have a sense of humor about the whole endeavor. If anyone does go see Phallacy, let me know how you liked it.

Posted in Books, Destinations, Science, Science in culture & policy | Comments Off

Poem of the Week: Edison in Love

Robin Ekiss writes poems that draw hungrily and indiscriminately from history, science, art, language, nature – basically, the entire liberal arts curriculum:

The consolation of physics
is art: scoliotic curve
of the earth, cello

that was Adam’s
first knowledge
of women’s pinched waists (“Vanitas Mundi”)

A recurring theme in her work is the troubled experience of women, particularly within the history of science, where we’ve been objects far more often than observers. But each historical vignette also evokes the everyday miscommunications in which all of us are complicit – families, lovers, men, women – and it’s those familiar, inevitable failures that I find most poignant.

Ekiss’ poem “The Man at the End of My Name” appears in the current issue of Ploughshares.

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Images in her mind

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Images in her mind shine through
Shea Beebe
Converse, TX

Finalists have been announced in the 4th Annual Smithsonian Magazine Photo Contest.

Categories include Altered Image, Natural World, Travel, People, and Americana. I think the Natural World category is especially strong – check out “Oregon Storm” and “Junior needs help.”

Winners will be named later this summer.

Update: winner has been announced.

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“tee” is for theobromine

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ThinkGeek sells a women’s t-shirt depicting theobromine.

Mmmm, chocolate.

It’s even chocolate-colored.

Something tells me this shirt would wreak havoc on my diet.

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