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A Universe on which to dwell

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2011

Marea Atkinson*
Affiliation:
School of Art, Architecture and Design, University of South Australia, PO Box 2471, Adelaide, Australia, 5001 email: Marea.Atkinson@unisa.edu.au
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Abstract

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The artworks The Cosmic Garden and To Dwell Upon the Universe created for the exhibition Astronomical Inspirations, at the Salle Miró, UNESCO Headquarters, for the launch of the International Year of Astronomy reflect upon the unfolding human perception and relationship with the cosmos and speculate on the nature of space expressed in printmaking via a study of astronomical phenomena, symbolism in visual and scientific artefacts and theories. The work overlaps between the printed image, the constructed print, the artist book and installation.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2011

References

Greene, B. 2004, The Fabric of the Cosmos (London: Penguin Books)Google Scholar
Gribbin, J. 2009, In Search of the Multiverse (London: Penguin Group)Google Scholar
Harrison, E. 2003, Masks of the Universe, Changing Ideas on the Nature of the Cosmos, 2nd edition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lachièze-Rey, M., & Luminet, J. P. 2001, Celestial Treasury, From the music of the spheres to the conquest of space, English edition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)Google Scholar
Reeves, K. J. 2001, The Infinite Palimpsest, 2nd Impact Conference 2001, available at www.uiah.fi/conferences/impact/reeves/Reeves.pdfGoogle Scholar