Showing posts with label cake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cake. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Sol-Monath is for Science Cakes

Celestial Cephalopod Created by Corinna Maguire for the Threadcakes Competition

I learned from the Wellcome Collection (a museum which aims to share "science, medicine, life and art") that February was once the month of cakes.



so let's talk about cakes as science-art and science communication shall we?

ATLAS detector cake (credit: Katharine Leney via Symmetry)

Universe cake (credit: David Morse and Katharine Leney via Symmetry)

Particle physicists Katy Grimm and Katharine Leney who work on the ATLAS collaboration at CERN, discovered they also share a mutual love of baking. Symmetry magazine covers their delightful cakes (and other baked goods) which do everything from directly illustrating the ATLAS particle detector, to equations, diagrams and other data visualizations to metaphorically communicating the structure of protons according to the Standard Model or communicating through the medium of the cosmos cake, the proportions of regular matter, dark matter and dark energy. You'll find more via PhysicsCakes on Twitter.

In the wonderful world of science cakes, Earth and planetary science and amazingly well represented. Australian zoologist Rhiannon has posted several wonderful examples, including tutorials for nested spherical cakes on her blog Cakecrumbs.

This wonder Earth cake shows oceans and continents on the blue icing layer, orange mantle and yellow inner and outer core layers. (via Cakecrumbs)

The beautiful Jupiter cake likewise has three concentric layers to represent rocky and icy core, a middle liquid metal hydrogen layer and an outer molecular hydrogen layer. She says the famous giant anticyclone storm, the Great Red Spot was what attracted her. She recreated the patterns in the atmosphere with "ivory marshmallow fondant, then dry brushing a combination of ivory, brown and maroon edible ink." (via Cakecrumbs)

You can find space cakes bedecked or embedded with the planets of the solar system! Consider this tutorial for Mirror Glaze Galaxy Cake from the Also the Crumbs Please blog, the Astronomy themed groom's cake or the award-winning portrait of Galileo Galilei!

Astronomy-themed groom's cake shot by Laurel McConnell


Mirror Glaze Galaxy Cake from the Also the Crumbs Please

Galileo cake, winner of the Birmingham’s Cake International gold medal in the international class.

The mirror glaze is also just the thing for anyone creating cakes representing marble, many minerals or geode cakes. Geodes in fact, have been a real trend in wedding cakes and there is an astonishing array of geode inspired cakes in every imaginable colours.

Mirror glaze cake with recipe from Musely
Boho geode wedding cake by Cake Life Bake Shop | Photo by Hope Helmuth
Geode cake via You and Your Wedding

Natural history cakes don't stop with mineral specimens! Flora and fauna are popular too. There's a long history of using actual edible flowers, or sculpting flowers or leaves, often cast directly from actual plants - but those that convincingly recreate lifeforms with cake, icing, chocolate, fondant and other edibles are my favourites.

Lifelike deer cake by legendary Grand Dame of the cake decorating world, Sylvia Weinstock
This beauty hits on both natural history and the history of science as it's inspired by the hyper-realistic botanical still-life paintings of Dutch artist Rachel Ruysch (1685 to 1750). This cake is deocrated with custom-made sugar flowers, created by Amy DeGiulio of Sugar Flower Cake Shop in New York City, and placed in a gold urn to complete the look. (via Martha Stewart Weddings)

Tasmanian Masked Owl cake from Cakecrumbs
Albino Burmese Python Snake cake by by Francesca Pitcher from North Star Cakes


Jakarta-based pastry chef Iven Kawi who runs the Iven Oven where she makes these wonderful terrarium inspired cakes which hit the succulent trend (via Colossal)


My son requested a dinosaur-shaped cake, capped with a Cretaceous scene with volcano and smaller dinosaurs for his 5th birthday, so I assure you, this is but a tiny peek at what is out there. I haven't even touched on paleontological cakes, or the gothic world of anatomy cakes. There's a whole world of yummy cake-based science art/communication out there for you to explore and, better yet, eat.

(Hat-tip to my friend Faunalia, who has been sharing images of amazing cakes with me for years! You can find some of our favourite images here.).

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Multimedia Cacti

The elusive cactibou, linocut by Ele Willoughby 2014
I've been working on a sort of quite possibly completely imaginary cryptozoological menagerie, which began sometime after the elusive cactibou a prickly desert cat-cactus hybrid complete with caribou/saguaro antlers improbably appeared fully formed in my mind. (Part of the delight of this project for me is to write the pseudoscientific description of each of my beasties. You can find the cactibou's description, from zoology to ethnobotany here.)

People sometimes ask me where I get my ideas. It's not an obvious question to answer well ("from my head?"), but I do know that cats are indeed prickly, mine seems to store water and disdain drinking, and that cacti seem to be more an more apparent in art I see. I thought today I would share some of the cacti art I've been admiring.

Valentina Glez Wohlers' Prickly Pair Chair- Classic
Their unusual though organic forms are appealing, but I love the whimsical improbability of cactus as home decor, as the prickly plants do not suggest comfort. Mexican born London-based designer Valentina Glez Wohlers' heritage shines in her delightfully whimsical Prickly Pair Chairs, which merge Mexican cactus shapes and colours and patterns with traditional European chair designs.

Valentina Glez Wohlers' Prickly Pair Chair- Tenango de Doria











More straitghtforward perhaps would be a simple cactus shaped pillow. Here's a cute one complete with DIY from everything emilty

DIY a cacti sampler with a Japanese craft book
It's easy to find cacti in all sorts of different forms and media. Check out ceramicist Lina Cofán’s
amazing wunderkammer of cacti and other plants.  

Lina Cofán

Lina Cofán


Lina Cofán

There are even functional ceramic cacti, like this beauty of a teapot:

lofficina ceramic cactus teapot
 
I love also the cacti in perhaps even less expected media.

ThornAndNeedle has a series of knit cacti

Cactus cake by Tetyana
Cactus cupcakes via Alana Jones Mann




Czech artist Veronika Richterová's magical sculptures from recycled PET bottles include some truly magical cacti (and jellyfish, amongst other things, via thisiscolossal).

Veronika Richterová PET cacti

Veronika Richterová PET cacti

Veronika Richterová PET cacti detail

There are also some beautiful illustrations in more traditional media.

Cactus Nest by Michelle Morin (unitedthread on Etsy)

Cactus Trio by Michelle Morin

Bird Sanctuary No. 5 by Michelle Morin



Anatomy of a Cactus by Rachel Ignotofsky


Thursday, June 20, 2013

Astrophysical Meme: Jocelyn Bell Burnell's Pulsar, Little Green Men, Joy Division, and Beautiful Data

In November, 1967, Jocelyn Bell (Burnell) was just a graduate student when she discovered the first radio pulsar (or pulsating star), a highly magnetized, rotating neutron star that emits a beam of electromagnetic radiation. This radiation (light in the radio frequency band) can only be observed when the star is point towards us; so, like the light from a distant lighthouse, it appears to pulse at a precise frequency. She had been working with her supervisor Antony Hewish and others to construct a radio telescope to study quasars (quasi-stellar objects which emit radio waves). She noted some "scruff" on her chart-recorder, and then that the pulses were incredibly regular, occurring every 1.337 seconds. Hewish was initially scornful and insisted the regular pulses must be noise from a human made source. He first dubbed this object, emitting with such regularity 'LGM 1' for "Little Green Men 1", a playful joke about their uncertainty about what could emit radiation so regularly - obviously it could only be a communication from extraterrestrials hahaha! Only after she found other such sources, in different places with different frequencies, were her colleagues convinced and this lead to the development of the pulsar model. It is now known PSR B1919+21.

The 1968 paper announcing this discovery in Nature has five authors, lead by Hewish, followed by Jocelyn Bell. In 1974, Hewish won the Nobel Prize for this discovery, along with fellow radioastronomer Marlin Ryle). Jocelyn Bell was not included as it was assumed that the "senior man" was responsible for the work. This was controversial and has been condemned by many leading astronomers like Fred Hoyle )(who with Thomas Gold was first able to explain the signals as due to a rapidly rotating neutron star). Jocelyn Bell Burnell herself has stated she was not upset. Bell Burnell has a great career and won many honours after her impressive start, but her exclusion from the Nobel win, based on her own research strikes me and many others as one of the more blatant and egregious examples of gender bias in the selection of Nobel prize recipients.

Not only the discovery, but the presentation of the data is impressive and elegant. The diagram above (from the Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Astronomy) shows superimposed images of successive pulses. Stripped down to their essential information like sparklines (chart lines without annotation or axes, but drawn of course to a common scale) so their regularity really stands out, and they can be easily compared and contrasted. If you are used to looking at time series, you'll know that since they can be easily superimposed and the pulses line up, that the frequency is quite regular. The diagram is downright eloquent, and would warm Edward Tufte's heart. It appeared even earlier in the January 1971 edition of Scientific American article “The Nature of Pulsars” by Jeramiah P. Ostriker (shown above on pale blue) and 1974 graphic design book on data visualisation ‘Graphis Diagrams’(via Gia's Blog).

From there, the image began a sort of life of its own. The British rock band Joy Division included the image from the Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Astronomy in a folder of reference material for their 1979 album Unknown Pleasures submitted to Peter Saville, who designed the album cover- iconic in white on black, it's the pulsar data graphically on a square field (at left). It of course appeared as art, without explanation of its source. The beauty of the image itself, as well as the devotion of fans of the enigmatic album, lead to it propagating as a meme to this day. Peter Saville himself gives a great explanation of the life of this diagram in this video.


Data Visualization Reinterpreted by VISUALIZED from VISUALIZED on Vimeo.

Consider how the image has propagated, from tattoos
via Gia's Blog and tattoo by dodie

to sculpture
[unkn0wn pleaSures 1919] by Marvin Bratke, Lasercut Sculpture 40x40cm, wood/acrylic glass

to food
Brock Davis

through fashion (both consciously of its original source, and more tongue-in-check critique of our contemporary cult of images disconnected from their source - though ironically, I'm pretty sure the tee shirt was designed by someone who thought kids today should know Unknown Pleasures, rather than radioastronomy).

PULSAR 1919 SKIRT by lovelysally

Graphic artist Adam J. Kurtz has created this humorous t-shirt via laughing squid

We've arrived at something interesting to look at on tumblr, without reference to Joy Division or pulsars, an enigmatic but captivating image with an unknown source... an unknown pleasure if you will.





LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails