Thorax: Trilobites in Music (Triple Trilobite Special!)
Tony Cragg's trilobitic sculptures. Welcome to 'Thorax', the second issue of 'the Geology in Art Webzine' entirely dedicated to trilobites.Curiously, I will start to discuss trilobitic music...
View ArticleCephalon: Wearable Trilobites! (Trilobites in Visual Arts part 1; Triple...
The artist Jeanette M. Norman designs trilobitic wearable art.Welcome again to the Triple Trilobite Special at the Geology in Art webzine. As you can understand from the title, I found so many examples...
View ArticleCephalon: Emotional Trilobites! (Trilobites in Visual Arts part 2; Triple...
When I realized my book 'Geology in Art' I had the honor to record tens of first-hand opinions of contemporary geologic artists. Indeed I based my research on the belief that the opinions and...
View ArticleA Record of Life
Owen Gatley and Luke Jinks authored a nice short movie: "A Record of Life". What is it about?Triceratops, Volcano, Iguanodon. Shark, Jellyfishes, Buffalo. "A Record of Life" isn't all about geology,...
View ArticleGeological Observatory of Coldigioco: where art meets science
<< It is self-evident that nothing concerning art is self-evident. >>— Theodor AdornoGeology is expressed in art through a plethora of media, styles and movements. For instance, it...
View ArticleWearable Trilobites: a Prehistoric Update
In a recent post I discussed about 'wearable trilobites', that are trilobites used as items of personal adornment. The oldest example of ‘trilobitic fashion accessory’ is the drilled fossil that has...
View ArticleForaminiferal Sculpture Park: a question of scales
Geological objects extend over a wide scale range: from tectonic plates to mountains, from glaciers to sand grains. Intriguingly, distant scale ranges are often interconnected and the same phenomenon...
View ArticleCoprolite time!
From the Paleolithic fossil pendant to Hannah Ingalls's wooly trilobite, geologic objects are often used as items of personal adornment. For this reason, it should sound trivial to speak - again! - of...
View ArticleColdigioco Geological Observatory: winter holidays special issue
Mountains, traditional cuisine, natural landscapes, snow-covered trees: It’s Winter Holidays time!Placed on a tiny hilltop, the Geological Observatory of Coldigioco is the ideal place to celebrate this...
View ArticleThe Microscopic Landscapes of Bernardo Cesare
It is an old canon of art, that every scene worth painting must have something of the sublime, the beautiful, or the picturesque. By its nature, photography can make no pretensions to represent the...
View ArticleGeoArt on National Geographic!
In the past issue I asked Bernardo Cesare "What are your dreams as an artist and a geologist?". Bernardo answered: "the dream of dreams is an article in National Geographic..."His dream come true!...
View ArticleA Geological Theory of Painting: John Ruskin's Modern Painters
“[The laws of the organization of the earth] are in the landscape the foundation of all other thruths – the most necessary, therefore, even if they were not in themselves attractive; but they are as...
View ArticleMusic from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge: Björk
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge is one of the most impressive geological features of our planet. Extending for more than 40,000 km, it represents one of the major tectonic boundaries of the Earth. In fact, at...
View ArticleArt or Science? Geology!
Arte o Scienza ('Art or Science') is a photographic contest supported by the University of Trieste. It aims to build awareness of scientific culture and promotes the relationship between Art and...
View ArticleThe Mineralogical Record Museum of Art
What happens to usIs irrelevant to the world’s geologyBut what happens to the world’s geologyIs not irrelevant to us.We must reconcile ourselves to the stones,Not the stones to us.[…]- Hugh...
View ArticleFrom musical to technological fossils
Fossils are not only palaeontological objects, but evocative cultural symbols.For instance, the French Romantic composer Camille Saint-Saëns wrote The Carnival of the Animals, a musical suite of...
View ArticleLinks
By the end of 1990, Sir Timothy Berners-Lee had developed the first web server, web browser and web pages. Nowadays, after more than 20 years of World Wide Web, hyperlinks are so pervasive to be...
View ArticleDinosaurs invade the Visconti Castle
The cover of 'The First Fossil Hunters' by Adrienne Mayor."The First Fossil Hunters" (Mayor, 2001) is one of the best books to explore the wonders of ancient palaeontology. The first edition of this...
View ArticleA Wax Kaleidoscope for the Carboniferous
More than 300 million of years ago, during the Carboniferous period, humongous insects and gigantic amphibians populated vast, swampy forests. These inextricable habitats originated vast deposits of...
View ArticlePaleoartistic Highlights on the Web
“The science of paleontology has always been inextricably tied to art.”- Davidson (2008)In 1995 Michael Brett-Surman, dinosaur collection manager of the Smithsonian, checked for damage after a pipe...
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