Nebula
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
Visual artist Lia Halloran’s new exhibit, “Your Body is a Space That Sees Us,” was inspired by women astronomers from throughout history. This image shows an original painting by Halloran of a cosmic nebula, based on a photograph taken by the astronomer Williamina Fleming, who helped create the modern classification system for stars.
The Universe on Display
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The works in the new exhibit are a combination of paintings and pieces created with a process called cyanotyping. Halloran starts by painting scenes from glass plate images of cosmic objects, taken from the Harvard College Observatory’s Astronomical Photographic Plate Collection. The images selected by Halloran were taken by a group of women astronomers known as the “Harvard Computers,” in the late 1800s.
The Universe Inverted
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The paintings, done on semi-transparent paper, are pressed against water color paper, and painted over with a light-sensitive light. When exposed to sunlight, the paint creates a negative image of the original painting.
Spectra
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
This piece by Halloran is based on stellar spectra (which reveal the chemical composition of a star) originally captured by astronomer Annie Jump Cannon, who created the modern stellar classification system. Halloran created these works from photographic plates captured by Cannon and her colleagues at Harvard.
Globular Cluster
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
This work by Halloran shows a globular cluster (a dense collection of stars) imaged by astronomer Helen Sawyer.
Globular Cluster Cyanotype
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The cyanotype print of the painting depicting a globular cluster.
Magellanic Cloud Painting
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
This work depicts the Small Magellanic Cloud. Astronomer Henrietta Swan Leavitt studied variable stars in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds and came up with a method for determining distances to cosmic objects.
Magellanic Cloud Cyanotype
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The cyanotype print of the painting depicting the Small Magellanic Cloud.
Galaxy
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The largest piece in Halloran’s exhibit depicts a swirling galaxy.
Through the Scope
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
Halloran also framed the paintings in circular frames, which may remind viewers of looking through a telescope, or into a framed mirror. Along with the title of the exhibit, this feature of the works is meant to draw attention back to the viewer.
Positive and Negative
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The original paintings are done on white paper with blue ink; the cynaotyped images have an inverted color scheme.
Experience the Cosmos
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
The images were displayed at the Luis De Jesus gallery in Los Angeles.
A Space That Sees
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
Works from the art exhibit “Your Body is a Space That Sees Us,” on display at the Luis De Jesus gallery in Los Angeles.
Looking Back
Credit: Courtesy of Lia Halloran/Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
Works by Halloran from the art exhibit “Your Body is a Space That Sees Us,” on display at the Luis De Jesus gallery in Los Angeles.
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