Anyone you know? (Use zoom controls at bottom of picture for detail)
Last updated 19th February 2011
You can add your own picture to the project by joining the Exquisite Corpse of Science Flickr Group.
Back in 2009 I blogged about a ‘science and society’ project that colleagues and I put together while at Imperial College. Our short film ‘The Exquisite Corpse of Science’ showed at the Imagine Science Film Festival in New York, and the Belgrade Science Festival (see Vimeo box at end of page). As this SEED Magazine piece explains, I later invited pictures from anyone who had something to say about science in their art.
I’ve been accepting pictures via a dedicated email address, but from February 2011, any new pictures should be added via the Exquisite Corpse of Science Flickr Group. Flickr doesn’t support the zoomable matrix presentation, so I’ll be periodically adding new pictures to the mosaic on this page. There are 800+ spaces available, and when they fill up I’ll increase the size of the matrix.
This is a WordPress page, not a post, so you can always come back to it from the Exquisite Corpse tab at the top of the site.
The Exquisite Corpse of Science from Tim Jones on Vimeo.
Other posts relating to the project
…can be found on the Zoonomian blog here and here, and on Andrew Maynard’s 2020science.org.
The original Exquisite Corpse page on communicatescience.com is HERE, but won’t be updated.
Software Credit
Mosaic Andreas Mosaic
Zooming Zoomify
Monkey Brand Comes Clean
Charles Dickens’s Mudfrog Homeopathy
Darwin’s Many Origins
Getting Cute at Disneyland
A Century of Southern California Aerospace
Charlie’s Rose
Richard Feynman’s Grave
Total Lunar Eclipse 10th December 2011
Steven Pinker in conversation with A.C.Grayling at the Wellcome Collection
David Attenborough – Darwin Lecture 2011, ‘Alfred Russel Wallace and the Birds of Paradise’
Matt Melis Shares 30 Years of the Space Shuttle at the London Science Festival
Lawrence Krauss Sprinkles Stardust at the School of Life
Since the mid 1980s, I've worked in university and industrial research, as a manager and editor in technology and environment for an international industry association, and held senior business development, strategy, and procurement posts in industry. I hold a PhD in chemical engineering from Birmingham University, an MBA from Warwick University Business School, and an MSc in Science Communication from Imperial College. In 2008, I left industry to focus full-time on my passion for science and technology, and to share that enthusiasm with others as a freelance science communicator. I live in London with my wife Erin.
Contact me at timjones(at)communicatescience.com or through the tab above.