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1/15/2003
UNVEILING OF NEW SCULPTURE
Genomic Science Transformed to Art
Muckenthaler landscape comes to life with the installation and unveiling of "Waltz
of the Polypeptides" (mixed media, Mara Haseltine, 2002). The 100’ x
50’ x
15’ sculpture illustrates the birth of one of the tiniest components of
life, a protein. The protein depicted is called the B Lymphyocyte Stimulator
(BLyS, pronounced “bliss”), a hormone that stimulates the human body
to produce infection-fighting antibodies.
The work celebrates the discovery of
BLyS, a finding that may help in the treatment of AIDS, inherited and acquired
immune deficiencies, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE),
and B-cell leukemia lymphomas.
"Gene therapy itself is the most elegant
form of treatment, using the body to heal itself,” says Mara Haseltine,
the creator of the sculpture. “Waltz of the Polypeptides" uses art as a
way for the viewer to understand the workings of his body simply by making it
larger than life.”
Materials and methods used in fabricating the massive
sculpture, are both ancient and high-tech, producing forms that are both familiar
and otherworldly. Beginning Wednesday, January 8, join the artist and her team
to watch the sculpture unfold and follow the installation of this beautifully
important work of art.
The sculpture is intended for garden installation. “From
the outset, I envisioned a natural setting for the work inspired by the Zen Gardens
of Kyoto. The work has also allowed me to blend a natural environment with a
wide spectrum of materials and fabrication methods that range from the very ancient
to the most cutting edge.”
Working with Tustin-based CTEK Corporation (www.ctek-on-line.com)
accurate rendering of the detailed structures of each of the diverse components
of the sculpture were reproduced at a large scale. The actual details were transcribed
from electron microscopic and nuclear magnetic resonance images. The individual
components were produced using 5-axis milling and rapid prototyping.
“I
happened to meet Mara when I was at CTEK, investigating ‘C2C’ a prototype
automobile we want to showcase at the 2003 Muckenthaler Motor Car Festival,” said
Patricia House, executive director of the Muckenthaler Cultural Center. “When
she told me about ‘The Waltz,’ I was instantly intrigued and offered
to have her show it on the Muckenthaler grounds. It’s such an amazing work
of art, and really a very important depiction of contemporary science.
"Waltz
of the Polypeptides" has its own internal narrative, as the viewer traverses
the seventy-foot length of the sculpture, the birth of a protein unfolds. Forms
are
abstract and familiar, as the large and small subunits of the ribosome gleam
and frolic down the length of the uniting structure, the messenger RNA. Each
messenger RNA contains a specific sequence of nucleic acids for each protein.
The ribosome subunits read the sequence and emit a nascent protein, a delicate
folded structure, called a polypeptide. Standing alone at the end of the installation
is an outsized sculpture of the completed protein itself. The commanding curves
of this ribbon diagram formation depict the protein’s constant vibration.
Viewers are invited to attend the approximate week-long “building” of
Waltz of the Polypeptides on the grounds of the Muckenthaler, beginning Wednesday,
January 8, 2003. A reception on January 18 is free to the public from 12 noon
- 4 p.m. The sculpture will be on display through January 20.
The Muckenthaler
Cultural Center is located at 1201 West Malvern Avenue, Fullerton, California.
Regular museum hours are: Tuesdays by appointment or group reservation; Wednesday
- Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday 12 noon - 4 p.m. Admission is
$5 for adults; $2 for seniors and students; children 12 and under are free. For
more information, visit www.muckenthaler.org or call (714) 738-6595. |
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