Art of the Americas:
Latin America and the United States, 1800 to Now!


Santa Barbara Museum of Art

March 13 - November 21, 2004



Cryptobiology


Cryptobiology: Reconstructing Identity, (2001), is included in Art of the Americas: Latin America and the United States, 1800 to Now! at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, March 13 - November 21, 2004:

The centerpiece of this yearlong celebration considers a broader concept of "America" by integrating works by artists from the United States and Latin America. Over 150 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, photographs, and installation art from the Museum's distinguished collection offer a fresh view of national and hemispheric identity.


Cox II
Cell Challenge


Telomeres Project on Imminent Immortality


Pet Study I

Nanoscape I


(art)n's work has been featured in significant exhibitions in California and New York, that were curated by Karen Sinsheimer, Chief Curator, Photographs Department, Santa Barbara Museum of Art:

A Decade of Collecting, The Santa Barbara Museum of Art, March 8-June 15, 2003

Genomic Issue(s): Art and Science, The Graduate Center Art Gallery, New York, February 25-April 5, 2003

photoGENEsis: Opus 2, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA, November 9, 2002 - February 1, 2003

Genomic Art: Portrait of the 21st Century, University of California Santa Cruz, June 18 - August 27, 2001

Out of Sight: Imaging/Imagining Science, Santa Barbara Art Museum, Santa Barbara, CA, April 11-June 7 1998


The Santa Barbara Museum of Art is a privately funded not-for-profit institution, dedicated to excellence in collecting, preserving, exhibiting, and interpreting works of art from various cultures and periods to enhance the quality of life of its visitors and community. Cryptobiology: Reconstructing Identity (2001), Cell Challenge: Gleevec (STI-571), (2001), PET Study: Reconstructing Rodin, (1998), COX-2, (1998), and Nanoscape I: Encounters in the Blood Stream, (1998), are part of the museum's permanent collection.