| Art and science brought together
 Opening on 15 January 2014 at Watermans Art Centre  , the exhibition will show installations and   sculptures made with stains of mycobacteria, transformed historical   artefacts, and textiles that reveal the complexities of the history of   tuberculosis (TB) and our responses to the disease.  Bioartist   Anna Dumitriu is fast becoming known for her work creating textile art   with and about bacteria, in particular stitching textiles with   superbugs, such as her 'MRSA Quilt'. For 'The Romantic Disease: An   Artistic Investigation of Tuberculosis', she has worked at the cutting   edge of research alongside Oxford University and Public Health England   scientists from the Modernising Medical Microbiology Consortium.   'The   Romantic Disease: An Artistic Investigation of Tuberculosis' explores   the history of TB from artistic, social and scientific perspectives and   covers subjects such as superstition, TB's literary and romantic   associations, the development of antibiotics and the latest research   into whole-genome sequencing of mycobacteria. It has been made in   collaboration with a number of leading organisations including the   charity Target TB and Brighton and Sussex Medical School, who gave   advice about the project.   Artworks in 'The   Romantic Disease' are made with a combination of textile art and   biological matter including strains of Mycobacterium vaccae, M. bovis   and M. tuberculosis that have been sterilised prior to exhibition. For   example, Dumitriu has developed a series of textile installations   stained with bacteria dyes patterned using antibiotic ‘resists’, which   focus on how early ‘antibiotics’, such as Prontosil, were derived from   chemical dyes. For a piece titled: ‘Where there’s dust there’s danger’   she has created a series of tiny felt lungs from wool and dust, into   which she has incorporated the DNA of killed M. tuberculosis made in a   Containment Level 3 Laboratory.   Re-crafted   historical artefacts and objects are added to the mix. These include an   intricately carved and engraved Pneumothorax Machine, previously used to   collapse the lungs of unfortunate patients in order to 'give them a   rest'.       
        January 10, 2014
       
        
        
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