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Necklace made from 3 billion year old fossil goes on show at Wellcome Collection

The necklace, carved from 170 spherical beads each made from a different material, includes the first single celled life on the planet

Nick Clark
Friday 15 November 2013 07:50 EST
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Carved rounded fossils, some from 3.2 billion years ago, go on show as a necklace at the Wellcome collection
Carved rounded fossils, some from 3.2 billion years ago, go on show as a necklace at the Wellcome collection (MJC, Courtesy of the artist)

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A necklace that has been more than 3 billion years in the making has gone on display at the Wellcome Collection as part of a new exhibition using art to look at global health issues.

Among the standout pieces is Fossil Necklace by Katie Paterson, who was artist in residence at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge.

“That was where they researched the genome, and I got really interested in genetic evolution,” the artist said. “That’s what sparked the idea to make this piece.”

The necklace has 170 carved spherical beads each made from a different material. “It starts with the first single celled life on the planet, from 3.2 billion years ago,” she said.

The piece, one of the earliest forms of rock on the planet, came from South Africa, and the necklace “works its way through geological time. From single celled organisms to the multi-celled, then the first creatures to open their eyes. It’s about significant moments in human evolution.”

It took about nine months of continuous work to source and carve the fossils. She travelled to fossil fairs and auctions around the world.

“About half of them were hard to track down as I was trying to show this great diversity not only of species but places around the globe.” Some of the trickier assignments included tracking coral from Java, a caribou tooth from Alaska and amber from deep in a forest in Congo.

It was not a problem to carve the fossils as there are still more available. Ms Paterson said: “I would not cut up anything precious. It’s the museums that have the really special pieces.”

Lena Bui’s drawings, photography, video and installation looks at zoonosis, the transfer of disease from animals to humans, while Elson Kambulu’s work looks to examine the cultural complexity of medicine and research in Malawi.

Also among the six artists are Thai physical theatre group B-Floor Theatre, which uses shadow puppets to look at the challenges facing immunologists.

Danielle Olsen, the exhibition curator, said: “Placing artists within scientific research institutions is one small way of bridging discourses and practices, creating opportunities for self-reflection. The exhibition asks questions about what we understand by global health.”

Wellcome Colletion's winter exhibition Foreign Bodies, Common Ground runs until February 10.

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