In 1754, the Anatomical Collections of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg were established for the purpose of providing teaching material for classes held at the Anatomical Institute. In the meantime, the collection is also accessible to non-specialists twice a year. Yet, due to the extraction of the specimen from its original context and its solidification into an object, a layman will never be able to perceive a specimen with the rational logic that is appropriate to the observation of scientific models. The object thus takes on the appearance of a shadow of the living, reminding us of our own mortality in a disturbing yet monstrous way.
Posts tagged as “science-related art”
w/k-Aspekt
Marcus Ahlers: System and Synergy
By Marcus Ahlers on October 29, 2016
Border Crosser between Science and Visual Arts
By Peter Tepe on October 29, 2016
Anna Lena Grau: Recodings
By w/k-Redaktion on October 29, 2016
Connections between Science and (Visual) Arts
By Peter Tepe on October 29, 2016
Sándor Barics: MARS and the Sunspots
By editor on April 27, 1024