Cynthia Beth Rubin
Plankton Prints with AR
2017 - 2018
Asterionellopsis in Red
2017
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Science Inspires Art:OCEAN
NY Hall of Science, New York, NY
September 2017 - February 2018
Maniac Episode 5
Ely Center for Contepory Art, New Haven CT
September - October 2017
Art/Science Collaborations on the High Seas
e-Gallery: http://oceanscience.art
February 2018, ongoin
Underwater Plankton
2017
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Maniac Episode 5
Ely Center for Contepory Art, New Haven CT
September - October 22018
Asterionellopsis with Pseudeo-nitzscia in Pink
2018
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Art/Science Collaborations on the High Seas
e-Gallery: http://oceanscience.art
February 2018, ongoing
Asterionellopsis with Pseudeo-Nitzchia in red+blue
2018
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Guinardia in Red and Green
2017
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Maniac Episode 5
Ely Center for Contepory Art, New Haven CT
September - October 2017
Art/Science Collaborations on the High Seas
e-Gallery: http://oceanscience.art
February 2018, ongoing
Jellyfish and Krill in Antarctica
2017
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Science Inspires Art:OCEAN
NY Hall of Science, New York, NY
September 2017 - February 2018
Art/Science Collaborations on the High Seas
e-Gallery: http://oceanscience.art
February 2018, ongoing
Tintinnid in Green
2018
Constructed as nearly abstract paintings, this series of works invite the viewer to swim with the plankton, the jellyfish, and the krill that make life on our planet sustainable. Raw source material is from Antarctica and the North Atlantic, as well as microscopic captures of plankton from Narragansett Bay, interpreted both digitally and in hand drawings. The works are collaborations between digital artist Cynthia Beth Rubin and Oceanographers in the Menden-Deuer lab at the University of Rhode Island, who gathered the raw imagery from oceans near and far.
Exhibited:
Art/Science Collaborations on the High Seas
e-Gallery: http://oceanscience.art
February 2018, ongoing
Cynthia Beth Rubin ©2021