乐播传媒 Exhibits Show Entwined History of Microscopy and Cell Biology

Anna Clemencia Guerrero, designer of the "Seeing Cells" and "Seeing Life" exhibits on display in the 乐播传媒WHOI Library. Credit: Emily Greenhalgh

Everyone knows the story of Robert Hooke peering at cork through his self-designed microscope and noting its porous compartments looked like monastery cells. Hooke couldn鈥檛 have known, in 1665, that his simple observation would launch research that culminated two centuries later in the 鈥淐ell Theory,鈥 designating cells as the basic unit of all life.

But 鈥淪eeing Cells,鈥 a new exhibit in the 乐播传媒WHOI Library, shows that our ideas of what cells are and what they do have been profoundly influenced over time by the microscopic images that scientists create. Its companion exhibit, 鈥淪eeing Life,鈥 highlights the many influential contributions of 乐播传媒 scientists and microscopists to our understanding of the cell, and its fundamental roles in life and death.

A public reception and viewing of 鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 and 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 will be held on Friday, July 22, from 5:30-7:15 PM in the 乐播传媒WHOI Library (2nd floor, Lillie Building).

Anna Clemencia Guerrero, designer of the "Seeing Cells" and "Seeing Life" exhibits on display in the 乐播传媒WHOI Library.
Anna Clemencia Guerrero, creator of the 鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 exhibit in the Bay Reading Room of the 乐播传媒WHOI Library. A public reception for the exhibit will be held Friday, July 22 from 5:30-7:15 PM. Credit: Emily Greenhalgh

"Seeing Cells"

鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 was created by Anna Clemencia Guerrero, a PhD candidate in the Center for Biology and Society at Arizona State University (ASU). Guerrero worked closely with historians of cell biology (乐播传媒 Fellow/ASU) and (乐播传媒 Whitman Center/University of Chicago), and 乐播传媒WHOI Library co-director Jennifer Walton, on exhibit content and design.

鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 explores how the first images of cells inspired new questions and theories, and how that questioning spurred the creation of more images. The exhibit encourages viewers to ask: 鈥淲hat is a cell?鈥 and 鈥淗ow do we know?鈥

Starting with images made by the earliest microscopes in the 17th century, "Seeing Cells鈥 follows important cell images through the early 20th century, including discoveries by 乐播传媒 scientists. In the 21st century, the number and diversity of cell images is enormous, including images of 鈥渟ynthetic鈥 cells that scientists design. The exhibit ends by asking viewers to reflect on how images of cells inform how we imagine them -- and what consequences that might have for future research.

"Seeing Life"

The 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 exhibit explores some of the key figures in the 乐播传媒鈥檚 earliest days as an institution. It highlights the research organisms as well as scientific and cultural contributions of 乐播传媒 affiliates such as Charles Otis Whitman, the lab鈥檚 first director; Cornelia Clapp, the first scientist to arrive at the 乐播传媒 in 1888; Nobel Prize winners Thomas Hunt Morgan and Albert Szent-Gy枚rgyi; and other influential scientists including Ethel Brown Harvey, Jean and Katsuma Dan, Ernest Everett Just, and Edmund Beecher Wilson.

鈥淪eeing Life鈥 also displays related books, publications, and microscopes, including an early model of 乐播传媒 scientist Shinya Inou茅鈥檚 polarized-light 鈥淪hinyascope.鈥 The exhibit celebrates the continuing diversity of people, organisms, and science at the 乐播传媒.

 

The 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 exhibit includes an early version of the Shinyascope, designed and built by 乐播传媒 Distinguished Scientist Shinya Inou茅, a pioneer of live-cell and video microscopy in the mid- to late 20th century.
The 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 exhibit includes an early version of the Shinyascope, designed and built by 乐播传媒 Distinguished Scientist Shinya Inou茅, a pioneer of live-cell and video microscopy in the mid- to late 20th century. Credit: Diana Kenney
乐播传媒WHOI Library Co-Director Jennifer Walton collaborated with Guerrero, Jane Maienschein, and Karl Matlin on the 鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 and 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 exhibits.
乐播传媒WHOI Library Co-Director Jennifer Walton collaborated with Guerrero, Jane Maienschein, and Karl Matlin on the 鈥淪eeing Cells鈥 and 鈥淪eeing Life鈥 exhibits. Credit: Diana Kenney

This project was supported by the National Science Foundation, Arizona State University, the Webster Foundation, and the 乐播传媒. To read more about the project鈥檚 background, please visit this page.

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