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This version of NSU News has been archived as of February 28, 2019. To search through archived articles, visit nova.edu/search. To access the new version of NSU News, visit news.nova.edu.

This version of SharkBytes has been archived as of February 28, 2019. To search through archived articles, visit nova.edu/search. To access the new version of SharkBytes, visit sharkbytes.nova.edu.

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Division of Public Relations and Marketing Communications
Nova Southeastern University
3301 College Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314-7796

nova.edu/prmc

SharkBytes Archives

Contact

Division of Public Relations and Marketing Communications
Nova Southeastern University
3301 College Avenue
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314-7796

communications@nova.edu

Students Learn the Art and Beauty of Bacteria

Agar art students

(L to R) Visiting professor Veronique Cote, M.F.A., student Jenna Knafo, and associate professor Julie Torruellas Garcia, Ph.D., at a collaborative teaching workshop for arts students.

Most people associate bacteria with infections and diseases, but can bacteria be beautiful?

In a teaching collaboration between the arts and sciences, NSU students taking the course ARTS 3700 Methods and Materials participated in a laboratory workshop where they learned how to use agar as a canvas and bacteria as the paint.

Veronique Cote, M.F.A., visiting professor at the NSU College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, teaches the arts course. The workshop was taught by Julie Torruellas Garcia, Ph.D., associate professor at the NSU Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography.

During the workshop, students worked with different types of agar and different species of microbes, discovering that most of the bacteria is commonly found in and on their bodies and is not harmful.

NSU shark-agar art

Arts students created colorful images using different types of agar and different species of microbes in a collaborative teaching workshop including faculty from the NSU Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography and the NSU College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences.

The students created colorful images of women, babies, skulls, and mushrooms and realized that bacteria could indeed be beautiful. “I think the students were intrigued by the process, which to me, is the most important thing for the class,” Cote said.

The students’ artworks were entered in the American Society for Microbiology’s 2016 Agar Art contest. Two submissions, Annie Nguyen’s “Grotesque Beauty” and Michelle Duddy’s “Bacteria at Birth,” were chosen as finalists. Graduate student Jorie Skutas (working in the lab of Jose V. Lopez, Ph.D., professor at the Halmos College) also is a finalist for her entry “To Microbiology and Beyond.”

These pieces are considered for a People’s Choice Award to be decided by a public Facebook contest. You can cast your vote by clicking on the links above and liking the post(s) you want to vote for. The contest deadline is May 26, 2016, at 5:00 p.m.