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Guide to Microscopes and Microanalysis

Margaret Oechsli, PhD Gallery

Born and raised in Poland, and holding a Ph.D. in Immunology from the Polish Academy of Sciences, Margaret Oechsli is emerging as an important artist in the relatively new style of photography.  Her work elicits the natural existence of art within science - at the microscopic level.

By varying the magnification, illumination and staining of the intriguing world beneath the normal threshold of human perception, Ms. Oechsli captures her vivid and powerful abstract images.

Three times, in 1997, 1999, and 2005 Ms. Oechsli’s art has been honored in the Nikon International Small World Competition.  One of her photographs filled a page of Nikon’s “Celebrating 25 Years of Photomicrography” calendar, and was part of a twenty-image Nikon show in 2000 at numerous museums and science centers throughout the U.S. Her work was also published in a form of 52 page calendar and multi-image poster by Hamilton Printing in 2003. She is currently displayed in the $7.6 million “World Within Us” exhibit at the Louisville Science Center.

She is not using photomicrography in a traditional sense for scientific illustrations. For her the microscope is just a tool for creating new genre of visual art, “photomicrograph art”. The intention is to find the artistic images existing in nature. Bring them to the surface. Share with others.

Recent critique:

  • - Featured in the October 28, 2005 edition of the journal “Science” in the editorial context - Is it art?
  • - Displayed on the “Vallejo Nocturno ” and “No Recomendable” cultural websites, drawing comparisons to Miro and suggesting that such artists – well in advance of their contemporary scientists - may have “seen” the microscopic essence of Nature.
  • - Article in the December 2005 issue of “New Physician” placed her “Minimalism” in the genre of Kandinsky, Pollock, Motherwell, and Miro.

Ms. Oechsli is employed at Heart & Lung Institute at Jewish Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky. Previously, she had worked as a Research Associate at the J. Graham Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville, the Polish Academy of Sciences and the University of Texas, Austin, Texas.

Contact

Oechsli Images Photomicrography's website is under construction. Please contact Dr. Oechsli by email at oechslimn@lycos.com.

Images at www.microscopy.info

 

The Echo Leads Home
(Niacinamine - Vitamin B3), Polarized Light, 8x

The Echo Leads Home
Mondo Bird Diary
(Casein), Bright Field, 20x
Mondo Bird Dairy
Clues to the Pendulum
(Aluminum Sulfate and Citric Acid), Polarized Light, 10x
Clues to the Pendulum
Onset Of Cure
(Phenyl Threonine), Bright Field, 20x
Onset Of Cure

More Images from Margaret Oechsli

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