March 22, 2024
New Foothills campus exhibit combines art, science and medicine
草莓污视频导航 graduate students Valerie Cates and Julianna Svishchuk turned inspiration into action, helping transform a space on Foothills campus into a colourful gathering spot for reflecting on art, science and medicine.
An artist herself, Cates鈥 research at the Cumming School of Medicine鈥檚 uses art and design to improve patient understanding of adult spinal deformity surgery through illustrated patient decision aids. Partnering with Svishchuk, a fellow grad student pursuing a combined MD/PhD and working in the , they founded the last year.
The students started planning the transformation of a third floor bridgeway in space between buildings on Foothills campus into an art gallery.
Over the course of more than a year, with support of then director Dr. Steven Boyd, PhD, and institute faculty and staff, the students selected paint colours, procured and installed multifunctional furniture, gathered artwork from students and staff and planned an opening showcase.
鈥淭he bridgeway is now a unique gallery space where art and science coexist. It is not only a platform to exhibit talented artists within the university community but also a means to foster greater understanding of science through art,鈥 says Cates.
Inaugural exhibit explores our connectivity
The theme of the inaugural exhibition on March 8, what science means to you, showcased 17 pieces by artists across campus, from undergraduates to professors. The work explores numerous ideas including artificial intelligence in science, the connectivity of life, living with chronic pain and women鈥檚 health.
Speaking at the event, Svishchuk emphasized the resulting showcase was 鈥渄riven by a love of art, science and medicine.鈥 Cates added their aim was to "create something beautiful and thought-provoking that encourages people to think about research differently.鈥
Current McCaig Institute director Dr. Cheryl Barnabe, MD, said to the students during the opening, "Thank you for pushing it forward and creating a space that we all get to enjoy. What's unique about this space is that it truly embodies what our institute stands for, bringing together people from different disciplines, institutes and departments to create new understanding."
The plan is to continue the transformation through new exhibits, inspiring new perspectives through art. The gallery is located in the bridgeway between the fourth floor of the Heritage Medical Research Building and the third floor of the Health Research Innovation Centre on Foothills campus.
鈥淭his has been in the works for a long time,鈥 says McCaig Institute researcher Dr. Antoine Dufour, PhD, who originally inspired and supported the students throughout the project. 鈥淚n my head, I鈥檝e been walking this space since the day I was recruited in 2016 and picturing something great here.鈥
"It鈥檚 inspiring to see how this vision came to life, how they were able to combine art, science and medicine,鈥 adds the scientist, who hails from a family of artists.
Steven Boyd is a professor in the Department of Radiology at the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) and holds a joint position at the Schulich School of Engineering in the departments of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering. He holds the Bob and Nola Rintoul Chair in Bone and Joint Research and was the director of the McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health from 2016-2023.
Cheryl Barnabe is a professor in the departments of Medicine and Community Health Sciences at the CSM. She is the director of the McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health. She holds the Arthur J.E. Child Chair in Rheumatology Research, McCaig Chair in Bone and Joint Health and the Canada Research Chair, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Autoimmune Diseases
Antoine Dufour is an associate professor in the Department of Physiology & Pharmacology at the CSM. He also directs the Southern Alberta Mass Spectrometry core facility. His research focuses on proteomics, N-terminomics, and protease biology. He is a member of the McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health, The Calvin, Phoebe and Joan Snyder Institute for Chronic Diseases and the Hotchkiss Brain Institute.