Merging science and art through fungi

Abstract Science and art have long been studied interchangeably, with notable polymaths emerging in the Renaissance such as Leonardo da Vinci (artist, inventor, engineer and anatomist) and Alexander von Humboldt (explorer, geographer and naturalist) with his fellow investigators Johann Wolfgang von...

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Main Author: Vera Meyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-04-01
Series:Fungal Biology and Biotechnology
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40694-019-0068-7
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author Vera Meyer
author_facet Vera Meyer
author_sort Vera Meyer
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Science and art have long been studied interchangeably, with notable polymaths emerging in the Renaissance such as Leonardo da Vinci (artist, inventor, engineer and anatomist) and Alexander von Humboldt (explorer, geographer and naturalist) with his fellow investigators Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (scientist and writer) and Friedrich Schiller (philosopher, physician and historian). However, this polymathic attitude and the co-operation between scientists and artists seemed to go into hibernation in the second half of the eighteenth century due to an overload of information, especially for the scientists. I illustrate here that the two seemingly diverse fields can feed and sustain each other not only from the attitude of how to think about an object, but also how to show this object in a way that may not have been seen before. Ideas and viewpoints gained from looking at an organism artistically can enable a scientist to think “outside the box”, providing insights to reassess earlier scientifically hidebound attitudes.
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spelling doaj.art-0b01c1cf12ca4c62af377b5d776c72fe2022-12-21T23:57:39ZengBMCFungal Biology and Biotechnology2054-30852019-04-01611310.1186/s40694-019-0068-7Merging science and art through fungiVera Meyer0Department of Applied and Molecular Microbiology, Institute of Biotechnology, Technische Universität BerlinAbstract Science and art have long been studied interchangeably, with notable polymaths emerging in the Renaissance such as Leonardo da Vinci (artist, inventor, engineer and anatomist) and Alexander von Humboldt (explorer, geographer and naturalist) with his fellow investigators Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (scientist and writer) and Friedrich Schiller (philosopher, physician and historian). However, this polymathic attitude and the co-operation between scientists and artists seemed to go into hibernation in the second half of the eighteenth century due to an overload of information, especially for the scientists. I illustrate here that the two seemingly diverse fields can feed and sustain each other not only from the attitude of how to think about an object, but also how to show this object in a way that may not have been seen before. Ideas and viewpoints gained from looking at an organism artistically can enable a scientist to think “outside the box”, providing insights to reassess earlier scientifically hidebound attitudes.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40694-019-0068-7
spellingShingle Vera Meyer
Merging science and art through fungi
Fungal Biology and Biotechnology
title Merging science and art through fungi
title_full Merging science and art through fungi
title_fullStr Merging science and art through fungi
title_full_unstemmed Merging science and art through fungi
title_short Merging science and art through fungi
title_sort merging science and art through fungi
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40694-019-0068-7
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