The (Viral) Glass Menagerie

Wednesday, March 06, 2013 - 02:25 PM

Science writer Carl Zimmer described viruses to me as “scary invisible monsters.” Are they less scary if they become visible? Glass Microbiology is a project of UK artist Luke Jerram. Working with virologists from the University of Bristol and glassblowers Kim Jones, Brian Jones, and Norman Veich, Jerram creates striking and delicate representations of some of the most deadly pathogens known to man: HIV, swine flu, SARS.

(Scroll down to see some of the sculptures)

In a BBC interview, Jerram says that he is “interested in exploring the edges of our senses … the borders and the limitations of what we can perceive.” Viruses sit precisely on that edge. Able to be detected with an electron microscope, but pushing the limits of its resolution, they straddle that line of what we can see and what we must infer. At one million times their actual size, these microbes we can hold in our hands (carefully) and get our minds around. Unlike the customary bright colors of textbook illustrations and health articles, Jerram’s sculptures are translucent. This choice is based on the fact that viruses, at 20-300 nanometers in diameter, are smaller than a wave of light, and thus don’t have color.

Luke Jerram's 'Common Cold (Adenovirus)'Common Cold (Adenovirus)

Jerram’s glass pathogens straddle the realms of science and art. They have been featured in the British Medical Journal and The Lancet, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art recently acquired Smallpox for its permanent collection. Jerram produces five limited edition pieces of each work. His newest work is perhaps his most benign: Common Cold (Adenovirus) covered in flower-like suction cups. Its beauty might cheer you up next time you’re lying in bed surrounded by balled-up tissues.

Glass Microbiology is on view as part of Playing with Fire: 50 Years of Contemporary Glass at New York's Museum of Art and Design through April 7, 2013; and in Pulse: Art and Medicine at Strathmore Fine Art in Bethesda, Maryland, through April 13.

 

Slideshow: Glass Microbiology

Malaria Artworks
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Luke Jerram, Malaria 

Ev71 - Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Enterovirus 71 - Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease

HIV (Series 2)
Photograph by Luke Jerram

HIV (Series 2)

HIV (large)
Photograph by Luke Jerram

HIV (large)

Papilloma 2011
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Papilloma 2011

SARS Corona Virus
Photograph by Luke Jerram

SARS Corona Virus

Smallpox
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Smallpox

E.coli
Photograph by Luke Jerram

E.coli

Swine Flu (detail)
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Swine Flu (detail)

Swine Flue (oval)
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Swine Flu (oval) 

Swine Flu (sphere)
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Swine Flu (sphere) 

Glass Microbiology at Biennale Kijkduin
Photograph by Luke Jerram

Glass Microbiology at the 2011 Biennale Kijkduin, The Hague.

Tags:

More in:

Leave a Comment

Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.

Supported by

Supported by

Feeds