Macro or Micro? Misinterpreting the Unfamiliar

Stephen Young and Paul Kelly
Sazmanab

Sazmanab presents an exhibition by Stephen Young and Paul Kelly.

The exhibition highlights patterns and similarities that emerge across vastly different scales in the natural world, using images produced through satellite imaging and electron microscopy. Bridging art and science, the collaborative works raise questions about how information is interpreted from different standpoints, whether from a cosmic perspective or from within our immediate environment.

The micro-scale images capture details typically smaller than a millimetre, while the macro-scale images depict phenomena extending across many kilometres. The difference in scale between these images can exceed a factor of one million. Satellite imagery records the Earth using multiple wavelengths, including those outside the visible spectrum such as near-infrared, thermal, and microwave ranges. Electron microscopy, by contrast, scans objects using a beam of electrons. Information beyond the visible spectrum is translated into colour or greyscale to make it perceptible. While some images may appear unusual in their colouration, they are processed according to standard scientific practices and, aside from colour assignment, remain unmanipulated. Comparable images frequently appear on the covers of scientific journals such as Science and Nature.

Artists’ statement:
Stephen Young reflects on an encounter at the International Geographical Union meeting in Tunisia in 2008, where he befriended a geographer from Iran and recognised a tendency to misinterpret the unfamiliar by confusing individual characteristics with broader populations. This observation forms the basis of the exhibition’s inquiry into how such misunderstandings, while sometimes humorous, can also have serious social and political consequences when scaled up.

Venue: Sazmanab (Khaghani St.)
Dates: 15 August – 16 August 2015, 16:00–20:00

Activities

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