Putting the A(rt) in STEM

Quinine: the Bite is in the Bark, by Adam Cook

The Shrike, by Stephanie Gallant

The Temptation of Prostaglandin F Receptor, by Brendan Burkett
There has long been a notion that art and science are separated by a vast and impassable gulf. Science is seen as objective and driven by quantitative facts, whereas art is subjective, emotional, and guided by aesthetics. This view reduces both endeavours to caricatures, and leaves little room for dialogue, let alone the possibility for scientists-as-artists or artists-as-scientists.
Practicing chemists have long known that this dichotomy is too simplistic; many are captivated by the tangible and conceptual beauty of the chemical world. While not a carefully guarded secret, until recently, this isn’t something we’ve been shouting from the rooftops.
Organized/curated by Louise Dawe, Brian Wagner, and Vance Williams, ChemiSTEAM – putting the “A” in STEM is an Art of Science competition aims to show the artistic side of chemistry and chemists. The various submissions to “ChemiSTEAM” – the photos, drawings, and even tea towels – showed that in the end it’s all about the stories behind the art.
Read/see more in the organizers blogpost @https://blog.degruyter.com/bridging-chemistry-with-art-how-we-put-the-a-in-stem/ (DeGruyter Conversations, 13.08.2021)
This year 3rd edition was coordinated around the IUPAC World Congress & Canadian Chemistry Conference and Exhibition, organized as a virtual event in August. An online exhibit was on display during the Congress and a special session was organized to meet the artists and learn the stories behind the award winning entries for ChemiSTEAM2021. The celebration of the beauty of chemistry featured the juried exhibition of original chemistry-inspired art from this year’s competition, including the following winning entries and honorable mentions:
First—Quinine: the Bite is in the Bark, by Adam Cook
Second—The Shrike, by Stephanie Gallant
Third—The Temptation of Prostaglandin F Receptor, by Brendan Burkett
Honourable Mentions
Silver Crystal Fern, by Andres Tretiakov
A Journey to Obtain Pure Hexagonal Crystals, by Victor Quezada-Novoa
I’m Picking Up Bad Vibrations, by Ashley Elgersma
Microscopic Kaleidoscope, by Zvart Ajoyan
While IUPAC publisher DeGruyter offered various book prizes, Chemistry International salutes the initiative by presenting a rendition of the three winning entries on this issue cover.
For past and future stories, search ‘ChemiSTEAM’ on the website of the Chemical Institute of Canada: https://www.cheminst.ca/?s=ChemiSTEAM
©2021 IUPAC & De Gruyter. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. For more information, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Features
- Restructuring IUPAC at the Turn of the 20th Century
- Systems Thinking and Sustainability
- IOCD turns 40
- IUPAC Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry 2021
- IUPAC Wire
- Chemistry International–Freely-Available Across the World
- IUPAC Announces the 2021 Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry
- Climate Change 2021—The Physical Science Basis
- 2022 IUPAC-Richter Prize—Call for Nominations
- Awardees of the 2021 IUPAC-Zhejiang NHU International Award for Advancements in Green Chemistry
- An Interview with Joseph Wang
- In Memoriam: Gus Somsen
- In Memoriam: Aubrey Dennis Jenkins
- Up for Discussion
- Combat Ethical Pollution in the Chemical Community
- Project Place
- Safety Training Program e-learning
- Green Chemistry in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Categorizing Interactions Involving Group 11 Elements
- Recommendations for terms relating to materials characterization: Latin and other introduced terms
- IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
- Making an imPACt
- Glossary and tutorial of xenobiotic metabolism terms used during small molecule drug discovery and development (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Interpretation and use of standard atomic weights (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Glossary of methods and terms used in analytical spectroscopy (IUPAC Recommendations 2019)
- The Gender Gap in Science:PAC Special Topics Issue
- Reference materials for phase equilibrium studies. 1. Liquid–liquid equilibria (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Special CTI on Polymer Sciences
- Stamps International
- One Hundred Years of Insulin
- Conference Call
- Snow Cover, Atmospheric Precipitation, Aerosols: Chemistry and Climate
- Educational Workshop in Polymer Sciences 2020+
- Where 2B & Y
- CHEMRAWN in Action—This Time with E-waste in Focus
- Poetic Science
- An Ode to IUPAC
- From the Cover
- Putting the A(rt) in STEM
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead - Full issue pdf
- Features
- Restructuring IUPAC at the Turn of the 20th Century
- Systems Thinking and Sustainability
- IOCD turns 40
- IUPAC Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry 2021
- IUPAC Wire
- Chemistry International–Freely-Available Across the World
- IUPAC Announces the 2021 Top Ten Emerging Technologies in Chemistry
- Climate Change 2021—The Physical Science Basis
- 2022 IUPAC-Richter Prize—Call for Nominations
- Awardees of the 2021 IUPAC-Zhejiang NHU International Award for Advancements in Green Chemistry
- An Interview with Joseph Wang
- In Memoriam: Gus Somsen
- In Memoriam: Aubrey Dennis Jenkins
- Up for Discussion
- Combat Ethical Pollution in the Chemical Community
- Project Place
- Safety Training Program e-learning
- Green Chemistry in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Categorizing Interactions Involving Group 11 Elements
- Recommendations for terms relating to materials characterization: Latin and other introduced terms
- IUPAC Provisional Recommendations
- Making an imPACt
- Glossary and tutorial of xenobiotic metabolism terms used during small molecule drug discovery and development (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Interpretation and use of standard atomic weights (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Glossary of methods and terms used in analytical spectroscopy (IUPAC Recommendations 2019)
- The Gender Gap in Science:PAC Special Topics Issue
- Reference materials for phase equilibrium studies. 1. Liquid–liquid equilibria (IUPAC Technical Report)
- Special CTI on Polymer Sciences
- Stamps International
- One Hundred Years of Insulin
- Conference Call
- Snow Cover, Atmospheric Precipitation, Aerosols: Chemistry and Climate
- Educational Workshop in Polymer Sciences 2020+
- Where 2B & Y
- CHEMRAWN in Action—This Time with E-waste in Focus
- Poetic Science
- An Ode to IUPAC
- From the Cover
- Putting the A(rt) in STEM