Beautiful Bacteria merges stunning imagery with a new way of looking at something we interact with every day. Each chapter introduces the different types of bacteria around us, illustrated with singularly beautiful photographs of these minute life forms and an approachable text that explains where the bacteria is located and what it does. Much as New York Times bestseller I Contain Multitudes did, Beautiful Bacteria brings the invisible world that has shaped our species to life. While we know microbes in our world are relevant, the focus of this book is what the invisible, microbial world looks like, where it comes from, and where new discoveries and biotechnology are taking us. Looking at the microbial world reveals countless questions about life and connects with the personal realm of bacteria in our daily lives. From the dazzling patterns of Proteus mirabilis to the shimmering fractals of E. coli and more, each chapter touches upon the little-seen microscopic universe and the impact it has on our macroscopic society, and sheds light on how we coexist in an increasingly biotechnological world.
Tal Danino is an interdisciplinary artist and scientist exploring the emerging field of synthetic biology. A TED Fellow, Danino is an associate professor at Columbia University and directs the interdisciplinary Synthetic Biological Systems Laboratory. His work has been featured in many media outlets such as the New York Times, Nature, and WIRED and his bioartworks have been featured in exhibitions around the world.
"The way we visually encounter the world is often a matter of scale. For natural objects too small for the naked eye, artistic rendering usually must stand in place of the real thing. In Tal Danino's 'Beautiful Bacteria,' science and art meet in a revolutionary new way. Mr. Danino has "programmed" bacteria to grow artistically - teaching some to glow rhythmically and genetically engineering others to produce vibrant-hued proteins. Though bacteria are among the earliest living things on the planet and have colonized every corner of the globe (including the insides of our guts and the outside of our skin), they are rarely considered 'pretty.' Our usual reactions tend to be fear and frenetic handwashing, but in Mr. Danino's petri dishes we see instead lavender forests, fractally repeated designs, even Rorschach inkblots in bright yellow, lime green, red and pink. By growing what comes from mouth swabs, scalps, babies' hands, drain water and more, Mr. Danino makes the invisible world visible and as unique in design as any art installation.'Beautiful Bacteria' may not make you love bacteria, but it will give you an astonishing new view into the rhythms of the microscopic world-and it looks prettygood ona coffee table, too."
– The Wall Street Journal
"In the latest revelation of the subvisual, Beautiful Bacteria: Encounters in the Microuniverse, Tal Danino, a biomedical engineer and founder of the Synthetic Biological Systems Laboratory, isolates all kinds of bacteria, dyes them, nurtures their growth and photographs them in petri dishes lit into wild neon tondos.... [T]his is an exercise in aesthetic response. Why do we keep reading man-made things - stained glass, bulls-eyes, sonograms - into these marvelous organic accidents? Maybe we've reached a level of Anthropocene where humans dictate not only the habitability of Earth but its legibility, too. Life imitating art, down to its molecules."
– New York Times
"Aesthetic bewilderment seems like the bedrock of Danino's new book: Here are the invisible microworlds so many of us take for granted brought to screaming life in flamboyant colors and electrifying geometries. Bacteria often inspire fear or disgust-particularly disease-causing pathogens such as Escherichia coli or Staphylococcus-but the beauty of these images draws the attention, provokes a desire to understand what the eye beholds."
– Nautilus