Parallel Play: The Art of Science and the Science of Art

January 17 – May 24, 2025

Parallel Play was created as an integral component of Marquette’s Biology class, Creative Problem Solving. This cross-disciplinary course teaches STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) students to embrace divergent thinking as a path to innovative problem solving. Through art-based activities and small group interactions with artists and STEM faculty, the class emphasizes the similarities between the creative processes of scientists and artists. The class is team-taught by Dr. Deanna Arble, Assistant Professor, Biological Sciences and Lynne Shumow, Curator for Academic Engagement, Haggerty Museum of Art.

Featuring work from the Haggerty’s permanent collection, Parallel Play is divided into four sections that coincide with the scientific method—clarify, ideate, develop and implement. Through the exhibited art pieces, connections will be made between the work of artists and scientists with a special emphasis on the essential elements of scientific research—rejection, revision and the formulation of new ideas. Parallel Play aims to demystify the process of innovation across disciplines and to illuminate the multiple routes of discovery and interpretation that art has to offer.

Support for this exhibition is generously provided by the Stackner Family Endowment Fund.

Images: (left) Deborah Brown, American, b. 1968, Untitled (Mushroom Centaur), 1994, Mixed media, 9 1/2 x 9 x 5 1/2 inches, 2000.10.2, Gift of Eileen and Peter Norton (right) Patrick Nagatani, American, b. 1945, Generation to Generation: Strategic Defense Initiative, Nuclear Powered Vehicles, West Mesa, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1991, Photograph, 17 x 21 1/2 inches, 92.12, Museum purchase, From Contributions in Memory of Nanette Heyse, Both from the collection of the Haggerty Museum of Art, Marquette University