Posts Tagged ‘x57r’

Exclusive: Have scientists found Leonardo da Vinci’s DNA? | Science | AAAS

February 1, 2026

QT: {{”
The hunt for Leonardo’s DNA has been a high-profile proving ground for “arteomics,” an emerging field that could transform how the art world authenticates and protects its most precious objects (see sidebar, below). Today, authorship decisions hinge on expert opinion on, for example, how a brushstroke was made. “Connoisseurship is still what counts,” says LDVP chair Jesse Ausubel, an environmental scientist at Rockefeller University who previously led a major project to census the diversity of marine life.

With human Y chromosome and other nuclear DNA sequences from both the drawing and the letters in hand, the LDVP team approached Lee, a Y chromosome expert, in late 2024. Lee was intrigued, and LDVP sent him blinded sequence data from swabs of Holy Child, several Frosino letters, and the cheeks of the scientists who sampled the materials. ….
Lee, Loftus, and Jackson geneticist Pille Hallast compared the sequences with a panel of some 90,000 known markers—changes in individual base pairs—that group Y chromosome sequences into lineages called haplogroups. Four samples from Holy Child and the Frosino letters could be reliably assigned a haplogroup—and they all converged on E1b1b, a lineage found in the Tuscany area that Leonardo’s extended family might have carried.
….
When Andrew Miranker peers at a Blakelock canvas, he sees more than brushwork and varnish. He sees a molecular archive. “Paint is a recording device,” says Miranker, a biophysicist at Yale University. As oil paint slowly cures, it traps fragments of DNA—human, animal, microbial—along with the dust and air of a studio. By interrogating vanishingly small samples of the strata on supposed Blakelock canvases, Miranker’s team hopes to uncover clues to whether they were done by the artist himself or a clever forger.
….
For instance, minuscule paint flakes from an oil painting of a family farmhouse by John Fairbanks, an American artist from the turn of the 20th century, yielded genetic signatures of farm animals, a dog, and regional crops such as wheat and clover.

DNA often gets star billing, but proteins can also be telling, says Julie Arslanoglu, an organic chemist at the Metropolitan Museum of Art who co-founded Art Bio Matters, an international consortium decoding molecular signatures in art.

She and University of Bordeaux analytical chemist Caroline Tokarski, a pioneer in applying proteomic analysis to artworks, probed a long-standing puzzle about 18th century English artist Thomas Gainsborough. …. In 1773, Gainsborough wrote to a friend describing a “secret recipe” for preventing smoke’s dimming effects: He dipped drawings in skim milk.

To test that claim, the Met-Bordeaux team analyzed rubbings from Gainsborough drawings in the Morgan Library & Museum. Their results, published in Heritage Science in 2020, confirmed the legend: The coating on Gainsborough’s sketches, including Hilly Landscape with Cows on the Road, contained bovine milk proteins, especially casein. But exactly how the artist applied the skim milk—and why it
helped—remains a riddle.

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https://www.metmuseum.org/about-the-met/conservation-and-scientific-research/scientific-research/arche

https://www.science.org/content/article/have-scientists-found-leonardo-da-vinci-s-dna

Source: Grantmakers.io

December 21, 2025

https://www.grantmakers.io/
Useful for foundation research (particulary personal ones)

Frank Gehry’s Forgotten Masterpiece: His Own House in Santa Monica – The New York Times

December 14, 2025

Frank Gehry’s Forgotten Masterpiece: His Own House in Santa Monica – The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/09/realestate/frank-gehry-house-santa-monica.html

NYTimes.com: He’s the Godfather of Modern Robotics. He Says the Field Has Lost Its Way.

December 14, 2025

He’s the Godfather of Modern Robotics. He Says the Field Has Lost Its Way.

Rodney Brooks, famous for the Roomba, argues the humanoid robot craze in Silicon Valley is doomed to fail.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/14/business/rodney-brooks-robots-roomba.html

Macy’s Studio · Moonachie, NJ

December 13, 2025

https://macysthanksgiving.fandom.com/wiki/Macy%27s_Studios

Macy’s Studio · Moonachie, NJ https://share.google/abxG97FBC33ighdwN

NYTimes: ‘Frankenstein’ Review: Guillermo del Toro’s Creature Rises

December 6, 2025

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/16/movies/frankenstein-review.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

NYTimes.com: Robert A.M. Stern, Architect Who Reinvented Prewar Splendor, Dies at 86

November 29, 2025

Designed 15 CPW

Robert A.M. Stern, Architect Who Reinvented Prewar Splendor, Dies at 86

He designed museums, schools and libraries before winning
international acclaim late in life for 15 Central Park West in Manhattan, hailed as a rebirth of the luxury apartment building.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/27/arts/design/robert-am-stern-dead.html

ABCs of architecture

November 8, 2025

https://nhpt.org/abcs-of-architecture

Fall Foliage Cruise NYC | Fall Foliage Cruise with Breathtaking Autumn Views

November 1, 2025

https://eventcruisesnyc.com/events/fall-foliage-cruise-nyc

Edwin Schlossberg – Wikipedia

September 25, 2025

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_Schlossberg

QT:{{”
Schlossberg graduated from Manhattan’s Birch Wathen School then took his undergraduate and post-graduate education at Columbia University eventually earning a Ph.D. in Science and Literature in 1971.[3][5][6] His thesis, which was later published as a book, was an imaginary conversation between Albert Einstein and Samuel Beckett, an idea that Schlossberg conceived while napping at Columbia’s philosophy library.[7] One of his advisors in Columbia was mathematician and philosopher Jacob Bronowski, and was also mentored by futurist Buckminster Fuller.[8][7]

Schlossberg developed as an artist during the 1960s in New York.[9] His style has been described as usage of words and image, through unconventional media, to create visual poetry in his art.[9][10] He has been singled out as a “leader in interactive design” by Wired magazine,[8] and has also been called a Renaissance man, an
intellectual jack-of-all-trades, and the grandmaster of interactivity by several publications.[8][7][11]
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