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Fast Company Matt Haber |
#Slowgrams: What One Silicon Valley Engineer Learned When He Stopped Taking Photos And Started Drawing "It opens that creative side of you," Fahd Butt said of sketching. "It helps to step out of your box and do something different." |
Chemistry World September 11, 2014 Philip Ball |
Appreciating art criticism Liu Bolin has commented on the degradation of China's environment and the chemical adulteration of its food and drink. His art is displayed in a new exhibition, A colorful world?, at the Klein Sun Gallery in New York. |
Chemistry World September 4, 2014 Hayley Simon |
Lead 'soaps' behind iconic artwork damage uncovered Lead stannate, Pb 2SnO 4, has been identified as the culprit responsible for disfiguring masterpieces by Rembrandt, John Singer Sargent and Johannes Vermeer. |
Information Today August 26, 2014 |
The Getty Continues to Expand Access to Vocabularies The Getty Research Institute released the Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names as linked open data. |
Fast Company September 2014 Jillian Goodman |
How The New Museum's Lisa Phillips Is Making Entrepreneurship Into An Art Form This month, New York's New Museum will launch an unusual incubator, called New Inc., that's designed to nurture businesses at the intersection of art, design, and technology. |
Chemistry World July 3, 2014 Tami Spector |
Of atoms and aesthetics Molecular aesthetics means many things to a few people. For some it means tangible aspects of compounds; for others yet, the ways that chemists represent molecules. |
Chemistry World July 1, 2014 Bibiana Campos Seijo |
Chemistry and art We often write about art-related chemistry, so this issue gives us an opportunity to analyze some of these stories in a bit more depth. |
Chemistry World June 27, 2014 Philip Ball |
Synthetic aesthetics Artists, designers, scientists and sociologists got together in 2009 for an intensive workshop that debated what synthetic biology might and might not mean. |
Chemistry World June 23, 2014 |
Conservative innovations Scientists aiming to restore and preserve precious works of art are turning to new techniques using lasers and microemulsions. |
Chemistry World June 20, 2014 |
The chemical history of the Durham Gospels With the advent of portable spectroscopic devices, the chemical makeup of pigments used can give us an extra way to understand the social and cultural conditions of the age. |
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