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Saturday, November 23, 2024

VISTA ‘Illustrations in Health’ exhibit to open at LASM

Louisiana Tech University’s VISTA Center is taking its show on the road — and in a big way.

The University’s interdisciplinary Visual Integration of Science Through Art (VISTA) Center will have a year-long exhibit at the Louisiana Art & Science Museum in Baton Rouge, Aug. 13, 2022, through July 31, 2023.

The exhibit, “Illustrations in Health,” will feature roughly 60  pieces by 50 Tech undergraduates who have been part of the VISTA Center  since its creation seven years ago. The exhibit’s aim is to engage the  audience in understanding the impact of illustrations on health sciences  and medicine. It will include illustrations of physical, mental, and  community health, biomedical research, and community engagement.

Tech and others will host events at the museum, and educational  programming will be available for K-12 school visits and guest speakers  throughout the year.

Tracey Barhorst, the Museum’s curator, said “Illustrations in Health”  will “delve into the often-overlooked work of medical  illustrators. Medical illustrations provide insight into anatomical and  physiological characteristics that would otherwise be difficult or  impossible to see. Illustrations help launch new scientific discoveries  and advance further knowledge about syndromes, diseases, viruses, and  general health.

“In a partnership with Tech’s VISTA Center,” she said, “LASM will  mount an exhibition which explores the visual representations of the  diseases, everyday occurrences, and lifesaving research that affects the  medical health of the members of our community.”

An intentional blending of science and art, VISTA began as a  collaboration between the Tech faculty of Nick Bustamante (art), Dr.  Mary Caldorera-Moore (biomedical engineering), and Dr. Jamie Newman  (biology) as they thought through illustrations for the presentation of a  2014-15 research publication. From that simple beginning, the young  program grew to include more courses, a minor in Pre-Medical  Illustration (2017), a minor in Scientific Visualization (2018), and the  actual VISTA Center, which Bustamante directs and Newman co-directs,  where faculty from art, science, and engineering team to offer students a  unique opportunity to communicate science, discovery, and medicine  through art.

In the past seven years, more than 150 art majors and nearly 70 STEM  majors have participated in VISTA-related courses and community  activity.

“I love to see these kinds of innovative and impactful programs  emerge from the collaborative efforts of our faculty members,” Tech  President Dr. Les Guice said. “Besides resulting in new courses and  minors, this interdisciplinary collaboration between the colleges of  Applied and Natural Sciences (School of Biological Sciences), Liberal  Arts (Studio Art & Graphic Design), and Engineering and Science  (Biomedical Engineering) has given our students the opportunities to  work with more than a dozen local, national, and international partners,  and students have created artwork for published children’s books,  health care posters, research publications, and graphical abstracts.”

“The collaboration between art and science like this is unique, and  as far as we know, there is not another undergraduate program quite like  ours and certainly not one in Louisiana or in the South,” Newman said.  “Students who pursue the minor in Pre-Medical Illustration will meet the  requirements for application to graduate programs to become a  professional medical illustrator. The minor in Scientific Visualization  provides more freedom for a student to explore areas of art and science  that they are passionate about.”

In early 2020 when the Museum — for the first time in at least 20  years — extended an open call for exhibition opportunities, VISTA put in  its application, went through a screening and interview process, and  was ultimately selected in what Bustamante, a veteran of how the art  world works, knows is an “incredibly competitive process,” he said.  “Being selected is a huge honor that reflects the professional quality  of work that our undergraduates are creating.”

“People will find it fascinating to learn about how these medical  illustrations were created and shared,” said Beth Welch, a 2015 Tech BFA  graduate from Monroe who was recently promoted from exhibits  coordinator to LASM’s Interim Assistant Curator. “We’re very excited to  share their story and how it has changed over the years.”

Bustamante and Newman won’t know precisely how many works of art and  creators will be represented until they have the show staged, but a  preview of the space in March when Newman was in Baton Rouge at the  Louisiana STEM Summit left her “overwhelmed by the opportunity.”

“With the space we are being given,” she said, “we have an amazing  opportunity to showcase what students who come to Louisiana Tech can be a  part of.”

VISTA will host an RSVP-only reception “to celebrate the creativity  and innovation of the students” in the program at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday,  Aug. 23, at the Museum, 100 S. River Road, Baton Rouge. For more  information and to RSVP, call 318.257.4287.

Original source can be found here.

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