Otago Daily Times

Collaborat­ive exhibition highlights fragility of oceans

- ELENA MCPHEE elena.mcphee@odt.co.nz

A COLLECTION at the Otago Museum showcasing the fragility of the earth’s oceans is the biggest yet in an annual collaborat­ion between artists and scientists, organisers say.

The exhibition, organised by the museum, the Otago Polytechni­c and the University of Otago, features work created by 20 scientists and 30 Dunedin artists.

Otago Polytechni­c staff member Pam McKinlay was cocurator with university lecturer Dr Jenny Rock.

The theme ‘‘Art + Oceans’’ was so popular she had to introduce a cap on the number of artists involved for the first time in its sixyear history, she said.

One of the centrepiec­es was made up of two sculptures of coccolitho­phores, taken from the exhibition and community event ‘‘Oku Moana (My Oceans)’’, which ran earlier in Dunedin in the New Zealand Internatio­nal Science Festival.

The singlecell organisms help remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

One artwork was of a complete, undamaged coccolitho­phore, and the other was of a dented one.

The aim was to ‘‘raise how important they are, in people’s consciousn­ess’’, she said.

University of Otago scientist Christina McGraw collaborat­ed with Dunedin School of Art student Hope Duncan on a jellyfish exhibit, using fibre optic cables to create a glowing tail. Other features included photograph­y and treasure chests of paua jewellery.

The exhibition would run until August 5, and then be travel to a Sustainabl­e Seas conference in September.

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Treasure trove . . . ‘‘Art + Oceans’’ exhibition cocurator Pam McKinlay at the Otago Museum with a sculpture of a coccolitho­phore.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Treasure trove . . . ‘‘Art + Oceans’’ exhibition cocurator Pam McKinlay at the Otago Museum with a sculpture of a coccolitho­phore.

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