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    Chemistry in Art

    Catawba College Chemistry Professor, Dr. Carol Ann Miderski, knew she had a sell-out class when 24 students from a variety of disciplines signed up for her Chemistry in Art class this spring semester.

    The course description read like a well-edited classified ad designed to sell:

     Chemistry in Art: For Centuries, artisans and craftspeople have
     worked with materials to make items of great beauty, value and
     utility. In this course, we will be learning about materials and
     processes both ancient and modern while exploring the chemistry
     behind them. Each lab will include a new craft project in a
     different medium. In class, we will explore why the materials
     behave and interact as they do through a developing understanding
     of materials chemistry. We will be working with a variety of
     materials including paper, fibers, glass, metals, dyes, pigments, and
     more.

    Miderski's students learned just how successful their learning had been over the course of the semester when they exhibited the products they made in class before a wowed audience at a Project Expo in Catawba's Lilly Center on April 24.

    Sheldon RogersSenior Sheldon Rogers of Waxhaw, N.C., who is pursuing a Bachelor of Arts degree in theatre arts, said he waited until his senior year to satisfy a required laboratory credit because he was hoping for an "interdisciplinary course."  In Miderski's class, Rogers found it. He created silver thumbprint earrings for his mother and a Celtic cross using a precious metal clay process, created three silk paintings and made a fused glass night light. These were several of the art projects pursued in the class which appealed to Rogers, but he like his classmates completed almost a dozen more, with varying degrees of success.

    Kali McCulloughSophomore Kali McCullough of Nashville, Tenn., seemed to speak for most of her classmates when she said, "Chemistry is cool, especially when you add art."  McCullough's success was demonstrated in the paper she made, in her devoré silk scarves, and her fused glass night light.

    Other art works created in Miderski's course included lampwork beads, anodized niobium jewelry, oil paintings, tie dye products, indigo prints, frescos and cyanotype prints. Dr. Miderski said, "It has been very rewarding to see how having an actual product to take home and show family or friends has made the science more relevant to students' lives."

    For those Catawba students lamenting the fact that they were shut out of Miderski's spring course, they will have another chance this fall semester. Miderski will be teaming up with Catawba Theatre Arts Professor David Pulliam to teach an interdisciplinary course called Art Materials: Science Meets Expression.


    RELATED CONTENT:

    PHOTOS: Chemistry in Art Exhibit

     

    Posted on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 12:11 PM
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