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Vol 8 - Special issue

Art and Science


List of Articles

Introduction to the special issue of Arts and Sciences on the Villefranche Marine Station
Elisabeth Christians

The Villefranche sur Mer marine station has received many names throughout its history, the last two of which are OOV for Observatoire Océanologique de Villefranche (1989) and IMEV for Institut de la Mer de Villefranche (since 2019). This special issue shows how this station is rich in history, architecture, geopolitics, science and strong personalities. At the end of the 18th century, naturalists had discovered the abundant biodiversity of the Villefranche bay: myriads of living forms so artistically assembled letting themselves transported by the sea along the currents and the seasons. The articles in this issue illustrate the tenacity of the scientists who seek to unravel the mysteries of this very diversified life. There are remarkable illustrations of scientists and artists who accompanied scientists or who got directly inspired by these uni-multicellular marine organisms.


Two Centuries of Arts and Science in Nice and Villefranche: 1) The Ancestors: 1800 to 1900
Christian Sardet

We tell the story of the exploring the flora and fauna of the Nice region, and in particular of pelagic organisms. This quest is the work of some twenty biologists associated with painters. In 1800, Antoine Risso, Jean Gabriel Prêtre, François Péron and Alexandre Lesueur described and painted flowers, fish and some marine invertebrates. In the middle of the century, Jean Baptiste Vérany, a naturalist from Nice, welcomed prestigious German and Swiss biologists - Johannes Müller, Rudolf Leuckart, Ernst Haeckel and Carl Vogt - who explored little known organisms such as siphonophores and radiolarians. And in the 1880s, Hermann Fol, Jules Barrois and Alexis Korotneff set up a marine station in Villefranche sur Mer, recognized as an exceptional site for the study of plankton. During this period, the Natural History Museum of Nice was enriched by the exceptional collections of flowers, fish and funghi assembled by Risso, Vérany and Jean Baptiste Barla, who employed Vincent Fossat for his talent as painter / illustrator. By the end of the century, the Nice region attracted foreign royalty and aristocrats, visiting biologists and impressionists painters. In a companion article (Sardet 2024 / 2 Les modernes - from 1970 to 2024) we show that organisms explored in the 19th century are still the subject of research at the Institut de la Mer de Villefranche (IMEV).


Describing the marine fauna of the Côte d’Azur in 1809: the study by François Péron and Charles-Alexandre Lesueur
Gabrielle Baglione

François Péron and Charles-Alexandre Lesueur, a zoologist and a naturalist draughtsman, formed a unique pair of scientists over a period of 10 years. Between 1800 and 1810, they put their work, their hypotheses and their experiments at the service of knowledge of the animal world. One of their favourite subjects was the study of marine fauna, particularly jellyfish. In 1809, in Villefranche sur Mer, in the Mediterranean, they continued the work they had been carrying out in the oceans during the voyage of discovery to the Southern Lands (1800-1804) decided by Bonaparte and led by Nicolas Baudin. Two centuries later, specialists in marine organisms continue to pay tribute to this pioneering work.


Two Centuries of Arts and Science in Nice and Villefranche: 2) The Moderns: 1960-2024
Christian Sardet

In a companion article (Sardet 2024-1 Les anciens : de 1800 à 1900) we told the story of the exploration of the fauna of the Nice region, and in particular of pelagic organisms. In this article we examine how, more than a century later, research in cell and developmental biology and in physiology evolved at the marine station of Villefranche-sur-Mer. While research in the biology and ecology of plankton remained predominant on the site, and gradually led to the growth of a large multidisciplinary oceanography laboratory (LOV), physiology and cell biology were introduced in the 1960s. New research teams focused on the physiology of fish and protists were welcomed. And in the 1980s a new research team was created by the CNRS which has grown to the present Laboratoire de Biologie du Developpement (LBDV). We describe how imaging and molecular biology techniques were used to understand fertilization and development in sea urchins, tunicates, cnidarians, and many other marine organisms already studied by the founders and visitors of the marine station in the 19th century. We discuss the development of new model organisms - the ascidian Phallusia, the appendicularian Oikopleura and the hydrozoan medusa Clytia. We also discuss promoting scientific discoveries via aesthetic photographs, drawings, exhibits and web sites.


Jewels of Scientific Illustration from Oceanographic Reports in the Library of the Institute de la Mer de Villefranche
John R. Dolan

The discipline of Oceanography might seem unlikely to harbor artistic work. However, the study of the ocean includes the study of marine organisms. Depictions of marine organisms appear in many reports of oceanographic expeditions, and some are undeniably works of art, jewels of scientific illustration. Here are exhibited a selection of plates from reports of early oceanographic expeditions held in the library of the Institut de la Mer de Villefranche. From the reports of the Challenger Expedition (1873-1876), the Campaigns of Albert 1er of Monaco (1885-1915), the Plankton-Expedition (1889) and the Deutsche Tiefsee-Expedition auf dem Dampfer ’Valdivia’ (1898-1899).


Lives adrift: anatomy of a drop of water
Claire Delfino

A drop of water is an infinitesimal world, totally unknown. I was able to observe under the microscope the tiny life that bubbles, teems, in barely 1 cl of water. Living creatures reproduce, feed, and die on a scale that is foreign and unknowable to us. On this scale, an hour can represent a life. I thus propose to represent the micro-organisms of a drop of water from the bay of Villefranche in the Mediterranean, in an attempt to discover and reveal the invisible creatures, whose refinement and complexity inspire me. Through this multidisciplinary work, I question the origins of photography with the cyanotype, and I thus appropriate scientific microscopy. I merge ancient and modern techniques to renew a documentary approach to the living.


The Surprising Microscopic Wonders from the Depths of Villefranche-sur-Mer
John R. Dolan

The Institut de la Mer de Villefranche is located near deep Mediterranean waters, and so is well-placed for investigations of the fauna of the deep sea. Shown here are some rare images of living microscopic organisms that populate the deep sea. Each shows a beautiful and complex morphology, and some images show unexpected features.


The Ocean: A Planetary Tondo Painted by Phytoplankton
Fabrizio D’Ortenzio, Julia Uitz

In the ocean, microscopic organisms are both the painters and the pigments of a large planetary tondo. These organisms, phytoplankton, green in color, under favorable marine conditions, color enormous areas of the ocean. So enormous that the extent, trully global, can only be observed from space. Here we present some images of the northwestern Mediterranean Sea, taken by a scientific satellite, which show us the beauty of this tondo visible only from an altitude of 700 km.

Other issues :

2024

Volume 24- 8

Special issue

Issue 1

Special issue

2023

Volume 23- 7

Issue 1
Issue 2
Issue 3
Issue 4

2022

Volume 22- 6

Issue 1
Special issue
Issue 2

Issue 3
Issue 4

2021

Volume 21- 5

Issue 1

Issue 2

Issue 3

Special issue

Issue 4

2020

Volume 20- 4

Special issue

Issue 1

Issue 2

Issue 3

Issue 4

2019

Volume 19- 3

Issue 1

Issue 2

2018

Volume 18- 2

Issue 1

Accounts

2017

Volume 17- 1

Issue 1