Blog

  • Things I want to do and learn in the next year

    Here are my plans for the next year. Not unforgiving checklists, but part of learning curve.  

    Talk to more artists. I have been surrounded by scientists after I embarked on life as a science illustrator. What has been missing is formal training in the arts. To still learn the artistic process of thought and experimentation, I hope to talk to and surround myself with ‘blue-blooded’ artists and learn to understand their language. I want to challenge myself with newer forms of art and thought. I hope to take feedback from these artists, on my work and improve on it.

    Picture taken during a workshop on composition in visual arts.

    Collaborate. I hope to collaborate more in the coming year, with scientists, with science writers, other science communicators, science visualizers, more artists, and educators. I have collaborated with scientists and science writers all along. I have experienced that exchange of ideas leads to an evolution of newer ideas. I want to work with people from diverse backgrounds and continue to evolve.

    EM image by my collaborator, Dr. Rituparna Chakrabarti.

    If you are interested in cooking up something together, get in touch.

    Share more. Some of my friends and well-wishers have helped me realize that I do not participate as much as I should/ I could. Being an introvert, it is a challenge to interact in real life and on social media. I plan to make an active effort to share more about my work, its challenges, and its rewards. As a part of this aim, I also plan to blog more. Writing these posts this month has eased me into writing to you.

    Read more. While I read a lot of children’s picture books, my reading of other literary material has reduced. I hope to get back to reading a few books a year. I also plan to follow some blogs regularly, including my favorites, Nautilus, and Brain Pickings.

    Teach more. During the last two years, I have learned about science illustration and visualization as a part of work. I have been attempting to discuss that in the workshops and seminars I have been presenting. I hope to have a collated, structured lessons to share these ideas with science students.

    Experiment with more techniques. I want to learn and experiment with more skills including stop motion movies, cyanotype printing, improve digital drawing skills, work with gouache, and mixed media compositions.

    If you can initiate me to any of these, please tell!

    Experiment with more products. I also want to bring more zines, more prints, more products to you in the coming year. I always have lot of ideas, hope to execute some of them. If you have suggestions, do mention.

    Experiments with jewelry and science

    Here is a new year of working, making and learning!

    Hope you get to do the things you want to do in the New Year. Cheers and let the merriment begin!

  • The year that went by in making work

    The year that went by in making work

    Making more work is how one really contributes in the world. This year got several big and small opportunities to contribute and collaborate. Sharing some glimpses here.

    #sciart

    CCMB art project. I got to create a lot of science-inspired artwork this year. Some of the work has to wait before it comes out in the public eye. One of the best projects I did this year was for Centre for Cell and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad. I created a series of seven artworks each with story and narrative from science studies carried out at the research institute.

    Top, left to right: Fragmented habitat, Unlimited genetic potential, Mother and the world.

    Bottom, left to right: Gene packing, Bacteria and ice, Rice and culture.

    If you are interested in purchasing merchandise based on these designs, write to Dr. Somdatta Karak, Science Communication and Outreach Officer, CCMB at [email protected].

    If you are looking to create science-inspired work for your organization or community, send me a mail.

    Graphia on the cytoskeleton. Being part of the cytoskeleton lab, I hear about and read about cytoskeleton. I spent a good part of my summer reading about the history of cytoskeleton research. This exposure inspired artworks that have been and will be rolled out on an image blog on the lab website.

    #art

    Sciwri Club. My trajectory as a science illustrator started while working with Club Sciwri. I continue to contribute to the blog and share it with my audience. This year I illustrated cover images to several blogs, particularly the series based on lectures by my teacher Dr. K. Muralidhar. It almost felt like an honor, and to hear good words from him. In this series, given the creative freedom, I have experimented a lot with forms. Find the articles and artwork here.

    Curiosity
    On measurement
    On religion and science.
    Proteins and Chemotaxis

    Sobremesa on Connect. The word ‘Sobremesa’ implies good times spent conversing over food. The fondest memories of the time spent in Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore involve Sobremesa. Approached by the team at Archives and Publishing Cell at IISc, for the cover of the printed version of the issue dedicated to food messes, I worked on my ode to my friends who made life at IISc possible.

    PC: Staff, APC, IISc

    #science illustration

    Bugs and behavior and evolution. This year I created three images for Dr. Deepa Agashe. Her group published several studies on flour beetle feeding behavior and evolution this year (cheers to her and her team!). I worked on images for blog reports on some of them and enjoyed working with her and her team.

    tRNA and evolution
    Research Summary

    Developmental blues. I also contributed concept images and drawings for talks by Dr. Arjun Guha. Sharing one of them.

    Zebra fish and mucle stem cells

    Stem cell. I also created diagrams and schematics on stem cells and their lineage for Dr. Rajshekar Giraddi and Dr. May Yin Lee towards a book. Unable to share the drawings since it is yet to be released.

    Tiger genomics. I helped Dr. Uma Ramakrishnan and her student develop the schematic for their protocol used in animal genomics.

    https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/06/20/349472

    Looking forward to more collaborations and work in the coming year.

  • The year that has gone by in learning and sharing

    My lifelong aim is to grow and learn, surround myself with people who are better than me (as human beings and as learners). This year was lots of learnings and lots of giving back. A friend recently reiterated that it is in teaching what we learn we grow as professionals as well as human beings. I share some of the highlights of the past year.

    Conference at EMBL. Representing lab took me to Microtubule meeting at EMBL, Heidelberg this summer. I got to present in progress on the science communication project I am currently working on with my PI in the lab to a scientific audience. I learned to blend as a scientific illustrator in an academic crowd. I also learned so much about microtubules from all the talks (that I almost felt like an expert at the end of it).

    Drawing and Science illustration, da Vinci style. After the meeting, I got the chance to work with a collaborator’s team at Institute Curie. I used my new education in microtubules to draw some molecules associated with the cytoskeleton. Under the tutelage of Mr. Renaud Chabrier, I spent time understanding how forms emerge from light and shade using charcoal and ink. While this idea seems obvious, attempting it was not easy for me as it may be for some. Hoping I will employ these lessons more carefully in my future works.

    Tree study (from Durer)

    Appreciation for Modern art. In addition to the traditional, da Vinci style of drawing, I got exposed to Modern art. Paris has a lot of art museums (well, of course), the one that has stayed with me the most is Centre de Pompidou. I never appreciated modern art before, but a day in that museum opened my mind to it. This has allowed me to appreciate more work by peers and previous.

    I find myself employing abstraction of form, color or thought in a lot of my new work. I got more exposure to the language of artists in a workshop by my friends at Multiverse.

    Animate and inanimate 

    Blog on science illustration for pedagogy. The exposure I got in summer, through discussions and reading, enlightened me about the differences and similarities in scientific visualization, science illustration, and science art. I the exposure was too powerful that it compelled me to contemplate more, some of it is shared in the blog I wrote for Confluence.

    Illustrations for Science communication. I was able to share my learning with enthusiastic students (and faculty) at Hindu and Gargi College, University of Delhi and IDAC college, Bangalore. It got to talk about science communication and the role of illustrations in learning and in outreach. Taking these workshops honed my ideas and improved my work process.

    Ipsa presenting talkat IDAC college, Bangalore. PC: Staff photgrpaher at IDAC.
    Student and faculty of Zoology department at Hindu College with Ipsa, and the artwork created during workshop. PC: Zoology Student at Hindu College

    Exhibit at National Postdoctoral Symposium. Exhibiting and selling the work among scientific peers is always fun. There is a sense of joy when scientists can see the work as an art piece. It is an experience to see it dawn on their face, the idea that science and scientific imagery, the ones they make daily in the laboratory can be art. It is an experience I want to have again. Thanking my friends and mentors who encouraged me to ‘go to there’.  

    Labmeet musings. I am privileged to have open-minded labmates and PI that are ready to discuss non-lab-research oriented subjects with similar enthusiasm as they would discuss research. During labmeets, I talked to them about how I think about what to keep in mind while creating an illustration, different kinds of illustrations and their relevance, preparation required for making these illustrations, how to use adobe illustrator, the thin and thick boundaries between science and art. Discussions with them have helped my own comprehension on these matters. I am looking forward to taking these discussions outside my lab in the next year. (Hint: invite me!)

    ScienceHigh. The first half of the year, I was able to organize science outreach talks. My nerd friends spoke of evolution, stars, colors and other fun things to a non-academic audience in Bangalore. I have not been able to conduct them in the latter half to the year. Hoping to resume in the new year.

    Books through the year. If I haven’t declared it already, let me scream, I love children’s picture books. This year I collected and read a whole lot of them. They give such a sense of joy, wonder, and hope. And I wonder why they are not ‘adult’ books, as we often need these reminders in the daily grind of life. I am listing out a few that I particularly loved (take my suggestions!)

    Coppernickel goes Mondarian by Wouter van reek; Du iz tak? by Carson Ellis; Tiny, perfect things by Clark and Kloepper; Big wolf and little wolf by Brun-Cosme and Tallec; Daytime Visions an alphabet by Isol.

    This year I also read some non-fiction for growth in work: Why art needs science by Roche, Farina and Commins.

    I hope to grow as a science story teller, artist, and as human being tomorrow (and in the newyear).

  • The year that has gone by

    #products

    This year was as eventful as the last if not more. I finally managed to create a website! I intend to post updates on the year that has been. This year was great for work in the lab, but due to the time crunch, I did not share a lot of personal work or freelance work. Hopefully, I will be more regular in creating and sharing content in the next year. Sharing some of the stuff I made this year.

    Zine on Gulmohar. Since I got exposed to the idea of zines, I wanted to make one. Having seen zines from other artists, I realized the potential and possibilities of exploration in this medium. In the first zine, I have put together, I go back to the idea of trees and the life associated with them in their vertical and horizontal, as a habitat and as apart of the habitat.

    Limited copies, hand labeled, matte-finish paper available for INR 120. E-mail me to get yourself a copy.

    Anaglyph of the cell. Since I picked the book Jim Curious by Matthias Picard this summer in a tiny bookshop, I wanted to make an anaglyph of my own. With the help of Google the omnipresent, I was able to convert my hand drawing into a joyful postcard. In the composition, a stimulus travels to nuclei of a cell, causing a series of events that ultimately cause the cell to respond.

    This drawing also featured during Comic-Con Bangalore as an add-on to a science fiction book by my friends Ravi menses and Rahul Mohsin.

    Available on photo paper with 3D-glasses and the description on a separate sheet for INR 80. E-mail me to get yourself a copy or more. Makes an excellent gift for children and childlike adults.

    Notebooks with flowers. If one were to browse through my old notebooks, it is easy to stumble upon a flower or leave pressed inside it. I realized that plants and notebooks have a relationship. With a botanical twist, I painted and printed cross-sections of ovary and anther of a plant on the book cover. The inside of the A5 sized notebook is 120 GSM whitepaper, great for writing (esp with ink) and pen, pencil sketches and light color washes.

    A5 sized, blank notebook available for INR 250 (the set for INR 450). E-mail me to get yourself the set.

    Calendar cum coloring book. After finishing two stock runs last year, I created some more copies early this year. A few copies remain in stock. The calendar can be used in a desktop version as well as a notebook version. A perpetual calendar where you choose the year and write in the dates. There are a lot of under-represented and unappreciated animals and bugs that need color of your imagination to bring them to life.

    7” X 7” calendar printed on 100 GSM paper, good for watercolor as well as pencil colors, hardbound with spiral binding, available for INR 500. E-mail me to get yourself and yours a copy.

    Shipping charges extra on all orders.

    This Christmas and New year’s, shop from artists and independent sellers! Happy holidays.

    More soon on what I taught and what I learnt this year!