Human Torso, polychrome plaster manufactured by Les Fils D’Emile-Deyrolle in Paris, c. 1900.

This exhibition at Vassar College’s Palmer Gallery through March 6 explores the intuitive, creative side to scientific experiments and inventions. “Spark!” displays materials demonstrating the creative leapโ€”featuring a serpent-shaped Renaissance horn, large prints of the moon taken from Paris in 1906, old medical charts, hand-colored bird slides, and many other devices, such as the Winogradsky Column (used to culture microorganisms), as well as sound diffusers, which manipulate the way sound moves throughout a concert hall. The exhibit is curated by Richard Jones, co-director of the Vassar College Artifacts Project. Vassar.edu.

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