skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
sarah roberts
Friday, 24 June 2016
making paintings for flies
The fluorescent paint brings all the flies to my yard. Wish I knew if they were like, it's better than yours.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Pages
Home
Blog Archive
►
2018
(1)
►
February
(1)
▼
2016
(2)
▼
June
(1)
making paintings for flies
►
March
(1)
►
2015
(3)
►
July
(1)
►
June
(1)
►
March
(1)
►
2014
(14)
►
November
(1)
►
September
(1)
►
March
(5)
►
February
(7)
►
2013
(11)
►
November
(2)
►
October
(4)
►
September
(4)
►
June
(1)
►
2012
(23)
►
November
(1)
►
July
(1)
►
May
(5)
►
March
(9)
►
February
(4)
►
January
(3)
►
2011
(98)
►
December
(3)
►
November
(11)
►
October
(17)
►
September
(9)
►
August
(9)
►
July
(10)
►
June
(8)
►
May
(7)
►
April
(12)
►
March
(12)
►
2010
(29)
►
September
(7)
►
June
(2)
►
April
(2)
►
March
(5)
►
February
(13)
Labels
painting
Physarum polycephalum
bacteria
botanical illustration
slime mould
drawing
paint
brain
fluorescent paint
Serratia marcescens
Simon Park
making art
scale
slugs
dust mite
micrograph
swarming
thinking
watercolours
Acacia cornigera
Leguminosae
Myrica gale
big fat cat
cleaning
commensal organism
data
diatoms
fungi
gynaecology
looking
microscope
pigments
Frankia
Hippophae rhamnoides
Strongylodon macrobotrys
algae
amoeba
bog myrtle
fluorescent pigments
immune system
lines
video
Alnus glutinosa
Kew
Lathyrus
Trigonella foenum-graecum
amateur microscopy
art
bllody avant-garde
botanical art
dinner
exhibition
fenugreek
herbarium
lichen
materials
music
nodulation
proteins
rhododendrons
spoken word
stars
strawberry
teaching
Astragalus alpinus
Edinburgh
Kilpisjärvi
Lathyrus vernus
Maynard Friedman
Medicago
Nicotiana
Pseudomyrmex ferruginea
Rhododendron lapponica
Sinorhizobium meliloti
Staphlyococcus aureus
Vachellia cornigera
ageing
ant
auto-immune disease
bioluminescent bacteria
botanical art worldwide
care work
coloured pencils
companion species
doggies
eating
eggs
ethics
fish
flowers
gram stain
lactobacilli
legislation
legumes
lichens
lotus corniculatus
methi
microcopy
micropaintings
mite
mucus
native plants
nodules
orchid
painting.
paintings
performance
phalaenopsis
pictophagy
plants
projects
rbge
roots
sea buckthorn
selling work
sewage
snails
studio
theories
tool use
watercolour
workshops
yeast
Popular Posts
Bitter vetch
I've been busy this year helping to put a show together for an international collaboration of botanical artworks celebrating native p...
Loving the lichens
I'm putting on some great workshops with my lichenologist friends Kristine Bogomazova and Frances Stoakley. We're sharing our favou...
Biting and chewing
Sometimes I feel like I have bitten off more than I can chew. Lovely acacia! But so many leaflets! Here's a look up through ...
Small things
Here's one I made simply because I wanted to. (You have to do things for the sheer joy of it every now and then or else you cut the nos...
shortest distance
So Slimey and I are in perfect agreement about the straight lines then. Seems to be unbothered by the ink, which is a good start. ...
Painting with eukaryotes
This time I'm making paint for muticellular organisms... Ha ha, that's right, humans, lovely, fantastic humans. This is ...
an Arctic adventure
I've come to spend the midsummer at Kilpisjärven biologinen asema to do a residency with the wonderful Ars Bioarctica . The idea i...
People who live in glass houses
It is a little known fact that diatoms are the Integrated Circuits or microchips of the living world. They hook up to magnetic bacteria ...
water music
Anyway, Shiori Usui and Rocio decided to get together to do some watercolouring to music and invited me along. We did things on our own to...
No comments:
Post a Comment