I’ve always had a fascination with how art and science intersect. My undergraduate studies focused on natural history, environmental studies and education. Teaching became my career, where I continued to promote interdisciplinary, thematic studies. Outside of work, during the past ten years in particular, I’ve leant much attention to developing my photographic eye.
A recurring challenge has been: how to visualize complex ideas (beauty of textures and patterns, climate change impacts, metaphor and fact) in the confines of a single image? I settled on photomontage, where I create a surreal conversation between the life-sized version of an object and microscopic parts of itself.
Five years ago I was thrilled to learn the art of scanning electron microscopy under the direction of Dr. Adam Summers at Friday Harbor Labs. I’m an educator, naturalist and photographer who had a long-standing dream to produce a book about my interests. I began working on this book, “
On an Acre Shy of Eternity / Micro Landscapes at the Edge,” exploring all the layers of beauty that I could find on the 3/4 acre Orcas Island property where my partner – artist Ranna McNeil – and I settled in 2014. During that project, I became intrigued by the possibility of using a scanning electron microscope to go beyond what I could see with my macro and telephoto lenses. Adam very generously took the time to orient me to the workings of the JCL Neoscope 5000, and from the first image I was hooked.
The image below references marine invertebrates harmed by ocean acidification, and features a micrograph of barnacle cirri: