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CultureMap Video

From science to art: New exhibit features sculptures from test tubes to explore foundation of life

Joel Luks
Jul 19, 2013 | 12:41 pm
From science to art: New exhibit features sculptures from test tubes to explore foundation of life
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The trajectory of the interplay between the fields of fine arts and science has not been consistently parallel. Thinkers may have at one time considered the two disciplines as sustaining one another, as connected milieus whose commonalities surpassed their differences. Be it a product of the zeitgeist of the Enlightenment and thereafter, somewhere along the lines arts and science developed as independent, decoupled areas of study.

A new installation by the VILD Arts Collaborative that debuts at Fresh Arts on Friday aligns itself with a contrasting trend, one that has rediscovered the value of dialogue between aesthetics and scientific knowledge, a movement in which their respective definitions aren't so clearly confined.

Submerged: Origin of Species is imagined by Rice University colleagues Vinita Israni, 22, and Linh Tran Do, 21, whose own scholastic path shifted from science to art. Israni began her undergraduate degree at Rice University as a biology major, then switched to visual arts with a concentration on studio art. Do was admitted to Rice as an architecture student, but subsequently changed her focus also to studio art after considering chemistry as a possibility.

"When someone looks into something, they also look into themselves."

"Life has so many interconnections that I feel like we can't help but draw upon other disciplines for our work," Do tells CultureMap in a video interview.

Indeed, one look at Submerged conveys their backgrounds as comprehensibly embossed in both the process and the final product, a collection of illuminated sculptures atop white pedestals that comprise an immersive, meditative, dimly-lit environment whose dual objective is to incite introspective contemplation while sketching an interpretation of the building blocks that decode and preserve life forms.

Using plastic test tubes, Plexiglass cut in square shapes, thread and string lights, each vertical structure whirls to the ceiling to infer a reconstruction of DNA of sorts. Synergies emerge from the layering of the unpredictable luminescence, transparency and shadows.

"We are made of tiny molecules that come together to create something really wonderful: Life," Do adds. "We wanted people to see these pedestals as made from individual test tubes.

"Maybe one test tube by itself isn't significant, but when you put them all together, they make a greater whole."

For Israni, the geometric shapes forged by the thread, both in their positive and negative space variations, rouses viewers to look inside and examine the source of light, which in its obscured, somewhat nebulous setting appears as a striking prism that undulates in intensity. But when the house lights are on, Submerged morphs into a sterile, inert mise en scene that's aseptically barren, bleak and desolate.

"When someone looks into something, they also look into themselves," Israni explains. "People reflect on where does the light come from in their own lives — and what it could all possibly mean in the larger question."

___

Submerged: Origin of Species opens at Fresh Arts (2101 Winter Street, Studio B11) with a reception on Friday, 6-8 p.m., and is on view through Aug. 23. Admission is free. The artists will sell a three-layer version of the sculptures redesigned into lamps ($100).

Submerged: Origin of Species is a collection of sculptures that comprise a meditative environment.

3 Submerged Origin of Species Fresh Arts opening video
Photo by Joel Luks
Submerged: Origin of Species is a collection of sculptures that comprise a meditative environment.
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Movie review

Adam Scott explores creepy Irish hotel in moody horror movie Hokum

Alex Bentley
May 1, 2026 | 4:30 pm
Adam Scott in Hokum
Photo courtesy of Neon
Adam Scott in Hokum.

There are relatively few actors who can switch back and forth between comedy and drama easily, but Adam Scott is the rare exception. He’s equally as well known for starring in comedy projects like Parks & Recreation, Party Down, and Step Brothers as he is for dramas like Big Little Lies and Severance. He’s going the latter route again in the new horror film, Hokum.

Scott plays author Ohm Bauman, who’s trying to finish his latest book. In an effort to avoid distractions and also pay tribute to his parents, he retreats to an Irish hotel where his mom and dad spent their honeymoon. Bauman, who is about as stand-offish as you can get, and the staff of the hotel are at odds almost right away, although Bauman finds a kind of kinship with Jerry (David Wilmot), a seemingly-homeless man he meets in a nearby forest.

Bauman becomes intrigued with the story of the hotel’s closed-off honeymoon suite, which is said to be haunted. His curiosity, though, seems to trigger a variety of strange things, one of which ends with him in an extended stay at the hospital. He returns to the hotel determined more than ever to discover what’s really happening in the honeymoon suite, with things both normal and supernatural blocking his way at every turn.

Written and directed by Irish filmmaker Damian McCarthy, the film’s approach to horror is both subtle and overt. On the good side is Bauman’s story, which gradually gets deeper as more is revealed about his past, especially the premature death of his mother. Bauman’s trauma over her loss influences his thinking and actions, and a possible connection between his current situation and his personal history broadens the scope of the plot.

There is plenty of creepiness to be found in the film, starting with the dark and decrepit nature of the hotel itself. Any building where a particular room is off-limits naturally inspires intrigue, and McCarthy does a solid job of building tension. That’s why it’s strange and disappointing that he gives in to the lamest of horror tropes - a sudden appearance by an odd-looking person accompanied by a big screeching noise - on multiple occasions.

The film is at its best when it features weird moments that are never or only slightly explained. A dead body in a rabbit suit is echoed by the unexplained broadcast from Bauman’s youth featuring a terrifying TV host with bulging eyes and rabbit ears. Bauman’s explorations take him into the hotel’s basement via a dumbwaiter, where he encounters all manner of strange things, including what seem to be witches. Because most of these things are left to the audience’s imagination, they hit harder in the moment.

Scott is known to be understated in his acting, and that skill works well in this particular role. Although he clearly plays Bauman as freaked out, he never indicates panic, and that level-headedness makes his character someone you want to follow no matter how dark the path might be. The mostly-Irish supporting cast is not well-known, but Wilmot and Florence Ordesh make the most of their short time on screen.

Hokum — a title that is also not explained — is a horror film that earns its bona fides through mood more than action. Even though not much of consequence happens throughout the film, it still keeps you on the edge of your seat trying to figure out what will happen next.

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Hokum is now playing in theaters.

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