Artist and geneticist Hunter O’Reilly brings exhibit to Michigan Sept. 3-26

July 29, 2002
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ANN ARBOR—Digital art using microscopic images of deadly diseases like ebola and anthrax, an actual laboratory bench artistically enhanced and oil paintings confronting topics such as human cloning — this is what happens when a Ph.D geneticist combines her scientific education with her artistic talents.

Madonna con Clon
 
Hunter O’Reilly, who has shown her artistic reinterpretations of science internationally, explores sensitive and topical themes of biotechnology and genetics with her latest exhibit, “Radioactive Biohazard: Benefits of Biotechnology,” which comes to U-M Sept. 3-26. Her visit will include a gallery tour and reception Sept. 20 and a genetics seminar Sept. 23. “Too many people have irrational fears of biotechnology,” O’Reilly said. “Without scientists working to share their perspectives, it is too easy for Albert Einstein to be mistaken for Dr. Frankenstein.” Elizabeth Petty, a well-known human geneticist at U-M, first proposed bringing O’Reilly’s work to campus as a way to reach out to diverse audiences and stimulate discussions about scientific issues influencing our lives. Art is accessible in a way that academic lectures might not be, she noted.
 
Ebolaisbeautiful
 
“There’s a lot of information and, oftentimes, misinformation, as well as a lot of hope and hype about what science can and will do for us. Innovative ways in which we can encourage thought-provoking conversations about frontiers in science are generally good,” said Petty, an associate professor of genetics who majored in art history as an undergraduate. O’Reilly’s art has appeared in more than 20 scientific publications, including the covers of Nature Reviews Genetics and Trends in Ecology and Evolution. As a lecturer at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, she created a course called Biology Through Art, where students create art in a biology laboratory. As part of Radioactive Biohazard, O’Reilly collaborated with art team Electric Eye Neon to create sculptures with animal bones and neon and to highlight images of deadly viruses with neon. Visit O’Reilly’s web site, http://www.hunteroreilly.com/, to see her art work, read her biography and learn more about how she combines science and art. Information about the upcoming show is at http://www.radioactivebiohazard.com
 
“A Few Cells Create a Kidney and a New Life: Portrait of Shauna Anderson”
 
The exhibit will appear at the Warren Robbins Gallery at the U-M School of Art and Design, 2000 Bonisteel Blvd. on U-M’s North Campus, (734) 936-2082. Hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and it is free and open to the public. The gallery talk is scheduled for 7 p.m. Sept. 20 at the Warren Robbins Gallery. A map of North Campus is available: http://www.umich.edu/~newsinfo/umnc.html The genetics seminar is planned for 4 p.m. Sept. 23 at the Department of Human Genetics, 5915 Buhl Building on U-M’s Medical Campus. A reception will precede the talk at 3:45 p.m. in room 4933, the Human Genetics lounge. A map is at: http://www.umich.edu/~newsinfo/ccamp.html and the Buhl Building is at the rear of the Medical Science II building. All events are free and open to the public. O’Reilly’s visit is presented by the Life Sciences Values and Society Program, which aims to foster public debate about the difficult ethical questions raised by developments in the life sciences and to better understand how those discoveries are affecting thinking and activities in all spheres of human life. http://www.lifesciences.umich.edu/values/program.html Cosponsors are: the Department of Human Genetics; Gifts of Art, U-M Health System; Health Science Scholars Program; the Life Sciences Institute; Penny W. Stamps Distinguished Artist Series the School of Art and Design; Program in Culture, Health and Medicine; Public Health Genetics Program; the Science, Technology and Society Program; Students Exploring the Life Sciences and Society; the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program; and the Women in Science and Engineering Residence Program. For more information about the exhibit and events at U-M, contact Aaron Goldenberg at (734) 936-2575, [email protected] Note: U-M has professional television studios and uplink capabilities. We can make arrangements to get reporters, photographers and camera crews into the gallery when O’Reilly is working on her installation. High-resolution images of O’Reilly’s works are available for media use at http://www.artbyhunter.com/mediaroom/hrimages.html
 
“Let My Family Live! Portrait of Randolfe Wicker, the First Human Cloning Activist”



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