Filming Fly Eggs: Time-Lapse Cinematography as an Intermedial Practice
Archives / Cinema / history / medical humanities / Talk / Technology

Filming Fly Eggs: Time-Lapse Cinematography as an Intermedial Practice

The LLMVC’s George Washington Wilson Centre for Visual Culture and the Centre for History and Philosophy of Science, Technology and Medicine would be delighted if you could join us for our next free online event ‘Filming Fly Eggs: Time-Lapse Cinematography as an Intermedial Practice‘ by Dr Jesse Olszynko-Gryn (University of Strathclyde) on Wednesday 15 September … Continue reading

The Suttie Arts Space FFC-MRI commission opportunity
Archives / Art and Science / Exhibition / Interview / Jobs / News / Technology / Uncategorized / University of Aberdeen

The Suttie Arts Space FFC-MRI commission opportunity

GHAT are pleased to announce an open call for an artist to investigate the work currently being developed by the IDentIFY research project and its link to Mark-1, the world’s first full body MRI scanner, which is on display at The Suttie Arts Space, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary. This call is open to artists working in … Continue reading

Huntly: A Place of Inspiration
Archives / Creativity / MLitt / Participatory Art / Postgraduate / Scotland

Huntly: A Place of Inspiration

Stepping from the train, I saw the petite houses of Huntly nestled within the beautiful, green countryside of Aberdeenshire. Adventuring further into the town, I discovered, what I later defined as, an array of “hidden faces” in “beautiful places”, including the dog on the wall in No. 11 Café, the clock’s face observing the square … Continue reading

Harvesting Collections for Social and Scientific Benefit: Hidden Stories at the Herbarium of RBGE
Archives / Art and Science / Cinema / Creativity / Interview / MLitt / Postgraduate / Scotland / Space / Technology

Harvesting Collections for Social and Scientific Benefit: Hidden Stories at the Herbarium of RBGE

The advent of the era of Big Data has highlighted a truism in scientific discovery: an inference is only as good as the data that underlie it. While it is tempting to believe that large, open-access data repositories are a recent invention, in fact scientific collections such as herbaria have been filling this purpose for … Continue reading