Art, Climate, and the Future We Shape” will be featured at the New Bedford Whaling Museum on AHA! Night on April 9.
From studying a newly discovered art piece to preventing mold and fungus in old paintings, chemistry and art history often meet and even inspired a new high school curriculum. A few weeks ago, ...
The University of Chicago has announced the winners of its 2026 “Science as Art” contest, which highlights images resulting ...
With input from two Nobel laureates, the curators of an innovative art exhibition in New York state are spotlighting the 10 molecules of the 20th century that have most profoundly altered our world.
Neuroscientist and artist Dana Simmons brings life science into living color with her Pop Art–inspired images of Purkinje cells, highly branched neurons found in the cerebellum that are involved in ...
Listen to Jack O’Brien of MM+M and Brandon Pletsch, president of scientific visualization at Real Chemistry, as they delve into the dynamic intersection of art, science and AI innovation in the field ...
The United Nations declared that 2022 is the International Year of Glass, and Newscripts would like to take this opportunity to celebrate the crucial contributions of scientific glassware to chemistry ...
Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) is often recognized as the founder of modern physics, perhaps even the father of modern science itself. But this popular image neglects one important facet of his ...
As we traverse the fourth floor of the Harvard Art Museums, expansive shelves of pigment jars on our right showcase a rainbow of colors, from ultramarine blue to “the blackest black.” To our left, ...
Scientists need skills in visual analysis and critical thinking, but these skills aren’t being taught or practised nearly enough in our university classrooms. One reason why science is hard to learn ...
Art, science and business converged in Astana for the opening of the Өnergy Creative Hub on March 27. The space, supported by Nazarbayev University (NU) Impact Foundation brings together researchers, ...
There’s a classic grade school science experiment that involves extracting juice from red cabbage leaves and using it as a pH indicator. It relies on anthocyanins, pigmented compounds that give the ...