Landell de Moura reimagined.
Landell de Moura reimagined.
Hypatia of Alexandria reimagined.
Hypatia of Alexandria reimagined.
Alfred Russel Wallace reimagined.
Alfred Russel Wallace reimagined.
Carl Sagan reimagined.
Carl Sagan reimagined.
Henrietta Leavitt reimagined.
Henrietta Leavitt reimagined.
Maria Prophetissa reimagined.
Maria Prophetissa reimagined.
Émilie du Châtelet reimagined.
Émilie du Châtelet reimagined.
Percival Lowell reimagined.
Percival Lowell reimagined.
Ada Lovelace reimagined.
Ada Lovelace reimagined.
Rosalind Franklin reimagined.
Rosalind Franklin reimagined.
Marie Curie reimagined.
Marie Curie reimagined.
Jeremiah Horrocks reimagined.
Jeremiah Horrocks reimagined.
Landell de Moura reimagined.
Landell de Moura reimagined.Portrayed by Pedro Bonatto de Castro. This piece reimagines Landell de Moura, a Brazilian Catholic priest, scientist and inventor. He may have been the first to publicly demonstrate a radio broadcast of the human voice in 1900, though his contributions were largely neglected by the Brazilian government and press. He believed that the Church was not an enemy of science and fought to further the view of a compatibility between science and faith. 
Hypatia of Alexandria reimagined.
Hypatia of Alexandria reimagined.Portrayed by Anjelica Scannura. Body paint art by Natasha Kudashkina. This portrait reimagines Greek astronomer, philosopher and poet Hypatia of Alexandria, who was the last director of the Alexandria Library. The body paint art refers to her design of a flat astrolabe, a navigation device based on the positions of stars which was consistently used for centuries after her death. For her views, she was accused of witchcraft and godlessness and killed by a mob of early Christians.
Alfred Russel Wallace reimagined.
Alfred Russel Wallace reimagined.Portrayed by Simon Rose. Styling by Della Chiu. This piece is my reimagining of British explorer and biologist Alfred Russel Wallace, who independently proposed a theory of evolution by natural selection. In fact, Charles Darwin was prompted to publish his work when he did due to Wallace’s independent discovery, which would revolutionize biology and contemporary Western thought.
Carl Sagan reimagined.
Carl Sagan reimagined.Portrayed by Ian Huggins. This piece reimagines Carl Sagan, an American astronomer who developed pioneering work in a number of fields, including planetary sciences, scientific search for extraterrestrial intelligence, and science popularization. Sagan inspired a generation of scientists, engineers and artists to the wonders and importance of science.
Henrietta Leavitt reimagined.
Henrietta Leavitt reimagined.Portrayed by Tatiana K. This piece reimagines American astronomer Henrietta Leavitt, whose contribution provided a method for measuring the distances to faraway galaxies. Her work lead Edwin Hubble to discover the expansion of the Universe, a revolutionizing idea at the heart of contemporary cosmology.
Maria Prophetissa reimagined.
Maria Prophetissa reimagined.Portrayed by Laura Atma. This piece reimagines the first historical alchemist in the Western world, Maria Prophetissa. Though very little is known about Prophetissa, the invention of several chemical apparatus for sublimation and distillation used to this day are attributed to her.
Émilie du Châtelet reimagined.
Émilie du Châtelet reimagined.Portrayed by Red Herring. This piece reimagines Émilie du Châtelet, a French mathematician, physicist, and author during the Age of Enlightenment. Her translation on and commentary of Isaac Newton’s Principia Mathematica is still considered the standard French translation. Voltaire, one of her lovers, declared in a letter to his friend King Frederick II of Prussia that du Châtelet was “a great man whose only fault was being a woman”.
Percival Lowell reimagined.
Percival Lowell reimagined.Portrayed by David Clarkson. This piece reimagines Percival Lowell, an American businessman, author, mathematician and astronomer who was fascinated with the possibility of life on Mars. The thought he saw evidence of canals on the red planet, and his drawings mapping these imagined structures fueled speculations that would influence the development of science fiction - starting with H.G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds.
Ada Lovelace reimagined.
Ada Lovelace reimagined.Portrayed by K. B. This piece reimagines English mathematician and writer Ada Lovelace, who is considered the world’s first computer programmer. The loom refers to her work on an earlier mechanical computer. She wrote the first algorithm intended to be processed by a machine.
Rosalind Franklin reimagined.
Rosalind Franklin reimagined.Portrayed by Anjelica Scannura. This piece features my reimagining of Rosalind Franklin, a British biophysicist and X-ray crystallographer who made critical contributions to the understanding of the molecular structures of DNA, RNA, viruses, coal and graphite. In fact, her work helped revolutionize our understanding of the very fabric of life, encoded in the genetic molecule structures in every living creature.
Marie Curie reimagined.
Marie Curie reimagined.Portrayed by Veronika Radolovich. This piece reimagines French-Polish physicist and chemist Marie Curie, who developed pioneering research on radioactivity. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize and the only woman to date to win in two fields. She discovered two elements, polonium and radium and was a pioneer in medical diagnosis using radiology.
Jeremiah Horrocks reimagined.
Jeremiah Horrocks reimagined.Portrayed by Adam Smith. This piece reimagines British astronomer Jeremiah Horrocks, who was the only person to predict the transit of Venus of 1639. The observation of this astronomical event helped measure the size and scale of the Solar System and it inspired a generation of astronomers in the following century to develop the first large-scale international scientific collaboration.
info
prev / next