Gilles Carpentier Research Web Site: Computer Image Analysis
Image analysis tools in biology and biochemistry using ImageJ

Home > « H2O », drawing and microscopy, a reciprocal pollination.

« H2O », drawing and microscopy, a reciprocal pollination.

Thursday 5 January 2017, by Gilles Carpentier

The exhibition « H2O », labeled COP 22 and elaborated in collaboration with the the author of this website, stages the cellular intimacy of a water drop. Iglika Christova took her inspiration in microscopy time lapse images of a sample of water taken from the Vincennes’s lake. In this transversal exploration of microbe’s world, drawing brings the poetry vision of the artist, projecting her fantasy in the microscopic scenes full of diverse moving microorganisms, observed in phase contraste and fluorescence. The resulting fusions between pixels and Chinese ink, is an oneiric world, produced by an additional mental human lens beyond the objective image returned by the image sensor. The exhibition will on view from 5 to 28 january 2017 at the Graphem gallery in Paris.

Interview with Iglika

Related links:

ArtsixMic: H2O de Iglika Christova dans le dévoilement de l’intimité cellulaire d’une goutte d’eau

LoisiraMag : H2O Dévoilement de l’intimité cellulaire d’une goutte d’eau

logoij ImageJ (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/) is a public domain Java image processing program inspired by NIH Image for the Macintosh. It runs, either as an online applet or as a downloadable application, on any computer with a Java 1.1 or later virtual machine. Downloadable distributions are available for Windows, Mac OS, Mac OS X and Linux. The author, Wayne Rasband (wayne@codon.nih.gov), is at the Research Services Branch, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Gilles Carpentier, Faculte des Sciences et Technologie,
Universite Paris Est Creteil Val-de-Marne, France.

Special thanks to Alessandra Albano for the English correction of these sites.
Computer Data Acquisition
for Biochemistry Practice Works

Image.Bio.Methods@free.fr
Image analysis tools in biology
and biochemistry using ImageJ