Abstract painting inspired by science and medicine
Website
www.artologica.net
Michele Banks is an American artist (also known as Artologica)[1] whose work explores themes inspired by science and medicine, including images such as viruses, bacteria, and plant and animal cells.[2] Her paintings and collages explore neuroscience, microbiology, climate change and more. She lives and works in the Greater Washington, D.C. capital region.
Although Banks' paintings are generally based on scientific[4] and medical themes,[5] she is not a scientist, but is fascinated by the natural world, and mankind's impact on that world, especially at the microscopic level.[6] She has exhibited in galleries,[7] art[1] spaces,[8][9] and art festivals[6][10] around the Greater Washington, DC region[11] and the Mid Atlantic. Several of her paintings have also been reproduced as book[12] and journal covers.[13][14]
In 2011 The Atlantic described her paintings as "simply breathtaking."[15] A 2018 review, The Washington Post art critic observed that her paintings had "soft but vividly hued watercolors, some displayed in petri dishes, depict viruses, bacteria and other microscopic players, including sperm thronging an egg."[16] Three years earlier, the same Washington Post art critic noted that her work "depicts the body indirectly through the mechanical pulses of EEG and EKG tests."[17]
In 2020, as the coronavirus struck the planet, Banks art was a "natural" for depicting the virus. She noted that she "created a whole series of work specifically inspired by the pandemic. I’ve been painting viruses for years, so of course I painted the coronavirus, over and over. It was all I could think about.”[18]