Racial bias is well documented in photography—consider, for example, photographers’ inability to capture and expose darker skin tones with film. Within the emulsion of film, the chemicals that recapitulate light, is inherent social bias. There’s a distinct prejudice within the algorithms of our digital imaging technologies.

Poet: Sophie Laurence. Scientist: Jason Samaroo. Click image to read poem >>

Mainstream media are bereft of, or misrepresent, people of color. In my own experiences, I am often the only Brown person, or person of color, in the room when attending exhibition openings.

Last year’s protests in response to the murder of George Floyd and the rampant anti-Asian hate crimes, along with my own struggles, motived something within me to be proactive.

Resultantly, I decided to apply to a city art grant focusing on racial justice with my collaborator, Linsey Jayne. I am a photographer and a neuroscientist and Linsey is a poet and editor. Our project, The Poetry of Science, provides an opportunity for people of color (POC) to amplify their voices and to be seen. Utilizing poetry and photography to validate the realities of POC, we aimed to counter the negative associations handed down by systemic racism by creating new and positive associations between POC, the arts, and the sciences.

Poet: Rachel Wahlert. Scientist: Huili Chen. Click image to read poem >>

This project paired local (Cambridge, MA-based) poets of color with local scientists of color to create poetry based on the work, motivations, and history of the scientists. Scientists’ portraits were created in collaboration with a local fine art photographer, Vanessa Leroy.

By combining the intensity of poetry with vivid imagery, our goal was to strengthen the voices and experiences of distinct communities of color to fill the gap between the sciences and the humanities. In pulling together these voices and collaborative works, we hope to offer a novel form of storytelling through the experiences of POC, emphasizing our place within the natural landscape and attempting to answer the question, “Where do we fit in?”

Presented below are the visual representation of scientists as integral parts of the natural landscape, embedded into the very foundation of reality that they study, observe, seek to understand, and create. Accompanying each image is original poetry that sheds light on the awesome power of the sciences and their unique role in the lives of each scientist.

Poet: Danielle Legros Georges; Scientist: Sheena Vasquez. Click image to read poem >>

Poet: Charles Coe. Scientist: Nandita Menon. Click image to read poem >>

Poet: Danielle Legros Georges. Scientist: Daniel Burje Chonde. Click image to read poem >>

Originally published on PetaPixel

Joshua Sariñana

Joshua Sariñana, PhD, obtained his degrees in neuroscience at the University of California, Los Angeles, and completed his doctoral thesis at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Sariñana’s multi-disciplinary art projects bridge art, science, and media. He has received several grants for his art projects, exhibited his work nationally and internationally, and has received numerous awards for his photographic work.

He combines his science communications background with his neuroscience and art practice. Sariñana has provided his expertise to WIRED Magazine, MIT Technology Review, MIT News, and as an invited speaker for the Neurohumanities series at Trinity College in Dublin.

http://joshuasarinana.com/
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