Diatom of the Month: February 2017
The Art of Diatoms
by Xavier Cortada
Artist-in-Residence
by Xavier Cortada
Artist-in-Residence
FIU
School of Environment, Art and Society
Fig. 1. Cortada’s one-hundred diatom works on tile (each 6″ x 6″), 2017.
I marvel at looking into a microscope.
I focus in and see
time. I see the past, really far into
the past. I see beautiful small aquatic plants encased in glass that lived on our planet for many millions of years. Sitting inside Dr. Evelyn Gaiser’s Algae Research lab at Florida International
University in Miami, I look at a slide and see diatoms.
Diatoms transport
me to a place so distant in time that it wouldn’t look like the Earth I know. They
help connect me to an Earth I am trying to better understand. An Earth fluid. An Earth as process. An Earth completely
interconnected. An Earth generating life forms across space and time.
Fig. 2. Xavier Cortada, Drawings of Diatoms from the Everglades, 6″ x 6″, ceramic tile, 2017.
In diatoms I
also see moments captured in time. Scientists
can determine the past salinity of water by examining the glass shells of
diatoms preserved in sedimentary core samples. Each diatom species has a
different salinity preference, so changes in the mixture of fresh and sea water
(driven by sea level rise and water management) can be inferred from past
diatom remains.
Their presence
in the layered sediment connects us to the ecosystem in which they thrived
while they were alive. Indeed, they are a portal to what once was so that
we can better learn how to protect what now is.
A diatom glass
shell is a talisman.
The tiniest of
talismans-- as tiny as a cell: a
single-celled organism that lives in the water and harnesses the power of the
sun to convert CO2 into organic substances to sustain its life and releasing oxygen in the process.
Indeed, the oxygen in one of every third breath we take was returned to the
atmosphere by and through diatoms!
Elegant,
gem-like, the bilaterally
symmetrical shapes of many diatoms move me to depict them in my art. I do
so to celebrate the science that shows us their relevance in our world. These
are some of the works:
Fig. 3. Xavier Cortada, “Diatom
Fountain” 16’ x 8’ x 8’, ceramic tile, 2017.
Diatom Fountain (Fig. 3)
I am currently putting finishing touches on Diatom Fountain. Comprised of 1,616 handmade, hand-painted ceramic tiles, we just need to add water as soon as we get the lights and water pump installed on this sixteen-foot tall public fountain. It is my latest public work, one of several featuring diatoms.
This one is
at Miami-Dade Housing Authority’s Smathers Plaza, an elderly living community
in Little Havana. Here, four vertical water channels disrupt the natural flow
of diatoms across the sculpture, much like dredging and canals have disrupted
the flow of the River of Grass across South Florida. I like depicting diatoms
in public places as a way of engaging audiences – an entry point for them to
learn about how scientists use diatoms to monitor water flow and quality in the
Florida Everglades and throughout Florida’s ecosystems.
Fig. 4. Xavier
Cortada, “Diatom” archival ink on aluminum, 36″ x 18″, 2014 (edition 1
of 5)
(©2014 Xavier Cortada).
Florida Coastal Everglades
LTER (Fig. 4)
Using a microscope, I captured the image of a
diatom from samples used by scientists working in the FIU-led Florida Coastal Everglades LTER (Long Term Ecological Research) program to study the
ecology of the Everglades and sea level rise. In the digital art piece, my
first work about diatoms, I had this
diatom image hover over a layer of maps (that I captured using Google maps)
showing the artificial canals and lakes created to develop parcels of
developable land where the River of Grass once flowed.
Fig. 5. Xavier Cortada, “Just
Below the Surface: 1915 (The Founding of Miami Beach)” 60” x 36”,
archival ink on aluminum, 2015 (©2015 Xavier Cortada).
Miami Beach City Hall (Fig. 5)
To create the Centennial art piece for the City of Miami Beach, I used a diatom as the central image for the digital work. The diatom depicted in the art piece was living on Biscayne Bay in 1915. It was creating the very air Miami Beach founders breathed 100 years ago as they brought the city to life. Its glass shell, all that remains from the diatom, is used by scientists today to see what was as they research environmental issues crucial to the city in the century to come.
To create the Centennial art piece for the City of Miami Beach, I used a diatom as the central image for the digital work. The diatom depicted in the art piece was living on Biscayne Bay in 1915. It was creating the very air Miami Beach founders breathed 100 years ago as they brought the city to life. Its glass shell, all that remains from the diatom, is used by scientists today to see what was as they research environmental issues crucial to the city in the century to come.
Fig. 6. Xavier Cortada, “Florida is… Sunshine (Sunset)” digital art, 2015.
Florida Turnpike (Figs. 6, 7)
I was commissioned to create permanent public art installations in three Florida Turnpike plazas, making them cultural destinations in and of themselves. Wanting to connect tourists and locals to Florida’s true beauty--nature, I portrayed Florida’s life-giving sun, its endangered animals and native wildflowers. At the Florida Turnpike Turkey Lake Plaza near Orlando, I depicted the Florida’s sun-using and water-bound diatoms that harness its power thus creating oxygen. Conceptually, I wanted to track a day in the life across the Sunshine State:
I was commissioned to create permanent public art installations in three Florida Turnpike plazas, making them cultural destinations in and of themselves. Wanting to connect tourists and locals to Florida’s true beauty--nature, I portrayed Florida’s life-giving sun, its endangered animals and native wildflowers. At the Florida Turnpike Turkey Lake Plaza near Orlando, I depicted the Florida’s sun-using and water-bound diatoms that harness its power thus creating oxygen. Conceptually, I wanted to track a day in the life across the Sunshine State:
of the Turkey Lake plaza),
at high noon,
and
Fig. 7. Xavier Cortada, “[Florida is… Sunshine (High noon):] Luster”
archival ink on aluminum, 20″ diameter, 2015 (©2015 Xavier Cortada).
These pieces are amazing! The natural combination of colors and shapes. I love all of them!!!
ReplyDeleteHave you considered or had experience in making 3D prints of diatoms? I have no experience but I'm looking for a model or shape file (?) to have some printed as a gift to a friend who researches diatomite.
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