Team:Imperial College/Communication work
From 2013.igem.org
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<h2>E.coli Art</h2> | <h2>E.coli Art</h2> | ||
[[File:ZScream.jpg|left|500px|One of Edvard Munch's greatest successes, The Scream, now expressed in all new splendour by the novel art form of <i>E. coli</i>]] | [[File:ZScream.jpg|left|500px|One of Edvard Munch's greatest successes, The Scream, now expressed in all new splendour by the novel art form of <i>E. coli</i>]] | ||
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The Scream, a masterpiece, clearly depicts an individual on a pier with a haunting expression with a heady back drop of a yellow and red sky. Reforging this painting with bacteria has created 5th rendition of this magnificent work of art. Originally painted in 1893 by Edvard Munch, The Scream characterised a tempestuous time in art as a precursor to the advent of Expressionism. As such, it is perfectly placed to represent the potential power of SynBio to revolutionise the modern world, and this in and of itself represents the verve behind team Plasticity to add value to waste with our MAPLE system. | The Scream, a masterpiece, clearly depicts an individual on a pier with a haunting expression with a heady back drop of a yellow and red sky. Reforging this painting with bacteria has created 5th rendition of this magnificent work of art. Originally painted in 1893 by Edvard Munch, The Scream characterised a tempestuous time in art as a precursor to the advent of Expressionism. As such, it is perfectly placed to represent the potential power of SynBio to revolutionise the modern world, and this in and of itself represents the verve behind team Plasticity to add value to waste with our MAPLE system. | ||
[[File:DSCF1933_edited.jpg|right|500px|Claude Monet's San Giorgio Maggiore, depicted by highly cultured <i>E. coli</i>]] | [[File:DSCF1933_edited.jpg|right|500px|Claude Monet's San Giorgio Maggiore, depicted by highly cultured <i>E. coli</i>]] | ||
- | + | <p class="clear">Claude Monet's San Giorgio Maggiore, depicted by highly cultured <i>E. coli</i>. | |
- | < | + | San Giorgio Maggiore is an island in Venice, best known for the prominent church that sits upon it. In 1908, Claude Monet painted this impressionist painting.</p> |
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- | Claude Monet's San Giorgio Maggiore, depicted by highly cultured <i>E. coli</i>. | + | |
- | San Giorgio Maggiore is an island in Venice, best known for the prominent church that sits upon it. In 1908, Claude Monet painted this impressionist painting. | + | |
Revision as of 00:03, 23 September 2013
Contents |
Communicating our Project
We communicated our project through an array of different media and social media platforms. We wanted to learn whther people valuable the stuff they throw away, what they thought about Synthetic Biology, our project and to spread the word about iGEM!!
We asked people the question, what would you make with a 3D printer?
E.coli Art
The Scream, a masterpiece, clearly depicts an individual on a pier with a haunting expression with a heady back drop of a yellow and red sky. Reforging this painting with bacteria has created 5th rendition of this magnificent work of art. Originally painted in 1893 by Edvard Munch, The Scream characterised a tempestuous time in art as a precursor to the advent of Expressionism. As such, it is perfectly placed to represent the potential power of SynBio to revolutionise the modern world, and this in and of itself represents the verve behind team Plasticity to add value to waste with our MAPLE system.
Claude Monet's San Giorgio Maggiore, depicted by highly cultured E. coli. San Giorgio Maggiore is an island in Venice, best known for the prominent church that sits upon it. In 1908, Claude Monet painted this impressionist painting.
Celebration of Science
Online newspaper
Check out our online newspaper for news and updates from our project, the iGEM community and global discussions about waste management http://paper.li/imperialigem/1377382636
We're featured on a SynBio blog: http://getsynbio.com/igem-page/
Science museum blog
Imperial Bioengineering Departmental News
https://workspace.imperial.ac.uk/bioengineering/Public/Newsletters/Newsletter%20August%202013.pdf
Social Media