[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Skip to Main Content

Newscripts

May 17, 2010
Volume 88, Number 20
p. 48

Chemistry, Acrylic On Canvas

Alexander Kobulnicky
"Benadryl:" An artsy antihistamine.
  • Print this article
  • Email the editor
Alexander Kobulnicky
Nerve gas: Kobulnicky's painting "Sarin."

More Science Stories

October 24, 2011

Bryostatins Retain Promise

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 10-17)

New results in total synthesis reinvigorate a 40-year-old field of research.

For Cave's Art, An Uncertain Future

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 38-40)

Disagreement on conservation course of action complicates a potential reopening.

Cancer Stem Cells

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 41-43)

Researchers zero in on the pathways that allow cancer to bounce back after treatment.

What's That Stuff? Blue Jeans

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 44)

Making the iconic pants requires both color-addition and color-removal chemistry.

Shedding Nanoparticles

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 5)

Materials Science: Chemists observe metal objects sloughing off ions to form nanoparticles.

Modifying Messenger RNA

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 7)

Chemical Biology: Methylated bases in mRNA may have roles in gene regulation and obesity.

Lab-On-A-Chip For Planets, Moons

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 8)

Microfluidics: Automated chip is designed to detect extraterrestrial amino acids.

New Editor For Analytical Chemistry

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 9)

Publishing: Jonathan Sweedler to take the helm.

Science & Technology Concentrates

(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 37)

 

October 17, 2011

Improving Shop Safety

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 56-57)

Yale updates policies on machine shop use after student death.

Cleaning Acrylics

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 58-59)

Conservation scientists seek new ways to keep modern paintings looking their best.

Detecting H2S In Vivo (Member Content)

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 60)

Studies could lead to sensitive and selective analyses for tiny signaling agent.

Rules For Design

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 9)

Materials Science: Guidelines predict structures formed by nanoparticles and DNA linkers.

Identifying Modified Cells

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 11)

Molecular Biology: Technique tags and enriches cells genetically altered by nucleases.

Linker-Free Molecular Wires

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 12)

Electronics: Metal-carbon bonds increase electrical conductance.

Asymmetry From A Guest

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 13)

Stereochemistry: Enzymelike pocket that hosts chiral species controls catalyst's enantioselectivity.

Science & Technology Concentrates

(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 54-56)

 

Text Size A A

Although it's not uncommon for chemists to talk about their love of art, finding artists who proclaim their love of chemistry is rare indeed. So the Newscripts gang would like to thank the art lovers over at "The Chemistry Blog" (chemistry-blog.com) for bringing the work of painter Alexander Kobulnicky to our attention.

Some artists focus on landscapes or the human form, but Kobulnicky has chosen MOLECULAR MODELS as the subject of his paintings (alexanderkobulnicky.com). "I think that molecular models have a unique aesthetic appeal," he tells Newscripts. "In each molecule, the brightly colored spheres align into shapes that are meaningful on a microscopic level—these are scientific diagrams, after all—but also represent whole realms of everyday experience. To a much greater extent than people commonly realize, greenness, growth, and plant life in general are just chlorophyll. The multiple layers of symbolism inherent in molecular models make them an ideal subject for art."

In Kobulnicky's paintings, the molecules "are rendered as space-filling models in a natural, low-energy conformation and displayed from an angle that shows off as much of their structure as possible," the artist notes. They have rich backgrounds that reflect each compound. For example, "heme is a constituent of blood, so the heme molecule is ringed by surrealistic blood vessels, while the endorphin peptide leu-enkephalin is featured alongside the translucent green orbs that any video-game player will recognize as a health bonus," he says.

"In many cases, I'm helped by the shape of the molecular model," Kobulnicky continues. "The alkyl tail of chlorophyll is shaped like a trellis, so I paired it with a climbing vine. And it is almost too convenient that the illicit drug THC, found in marijuana, is shaped like a hookah or bong."

Even though he's always on the lookout for complex molecules to paint, he has found that some compounds don't lend themselves to his technique. "Morphine, consisting of two sets of interlocking, perpendicular rings, looks like an inchoate blob from every angle, and I've had to abort more than a few attempts to sketch it out," he confesses. "More ambitiously, vitamin B-12, which is an icon of medicine and nutrition and a landmark in the history of synthetic chemistry, has a uniquely frustrating shape that simply won't lie flat."

Kobulnicky says he has been interested in chemistry since his elementary school days, when he built molecules out of plasticine and toothpicks. He did a short stint as a chemistry student in college, but after spilling a beaker of nitric acid on his hand, Kobulnicky says he "decided to leave applied chemistry to more adroit students." He took a degree in philosophy instead.

"I think my focus on painting, which I started doing a few years after I bowed out of laboratory work, has the same spirit of inquiry into the fundamental elements of existence—with less risk of injury," Kobulnicky says. "My absentminded work habits still find their outlet, though, in the fact that every article of clothing, upholstery, and carpet I own is covered in smears of indelible acrylic paint. Whenever I look at my shirts, speckled with mars black and titanium white, I can imagine that in another life, I might have been speckled with caustic reagents by now."

Bethany Halford wrote this week's column. Please send comments and suggestions to newscripts@acs.org.

Chemical & Engineering News
ISSN 0009-2347
Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
  • Print this article
  • Email the editor

Services & Tools

ACS Resources

ACS is the leading employment source for recruiting scientific professionals. ACS Careers and C&EN Classifieds provide employers direct access to scientific talent both in print and online. Jobseekers | Employers

» Join ACS

Join more than 161,000 professionals in the chemical sciences world-wide, as a member of the American Chemical Society.
» Join Now!