The Great Wave of Candida by Cristina Marcos, Candida albicans, Candida glabrata, Candida parapsilosis
Cells, Nesterenkonia, Deinociccus, Sphingomonas
Flowering Sunshine, Shigella, Salmonella
Mushrooms, Nesterenkonia, Deinociccus, Sphingomonas
Third place: Harvest season by Maria Eugenia Inda, Saccharomyces cerevisiae
The Streptomyces Sky, Streptomyces coelicolor
First place: Neurons by Mehmet Berkmen and artist Maria Pernil, Nesterenkonia, Deinociccus, Sphingomonas
Jellyfish by Maria Penil, Nesterenkonia, Deinociccus, Sphingomonas, Bacillus
Yeast Go Viral, S. cerevisiae, L-A virus
People’s choice: Cell to Cell by Mehmet Berkmen and artist Maria Pernil, Nesterenkonia, Deinociccus, Sphingomonas
Microbiologists Create ‘Starry Night’ And Other Art With Bacteria For First Microbe Art Competition
American Society for Microbiology | microbeworld.org | Facebook
SEE THE LEGENDS
The American Society for Microbiologists recently hosted its first international ‘Agar Art’ challenge in which microbiologists from around the world used various microbes and germs to create beautiful works of art in petri dishes. The submissions included recognizable paintings like Van Gogh’s ‘Starry Night’ as well as original microbe paintings.
The scientists used nutritious agar jelly as a “canvas” for their colorful microbes. While they do add an element of randomness as they grow, they can also do things that paint cannot – some of them emit bioflourescent light under certain conditions, while others, guided by the scientists, grew into perfect tree-branch patterns or jelly-fish tentacles.
For more about the process behind art like this, read about the work of Tasha Sturm, a microbiologist who used an agar dish to capture the germs on an eight-year-old boy’s hand. Source: boredpanda
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