The University of Portsmouth, Faculty of Science and Faculty of Creative and Cultural Industries are pleased to share an exhibition, and talk, based on the intriguing subject of palaeoart.
A Natural History of Deep Time is an exhibition that celebrates billions of years of evolution with a gallery of palaeoart: Scientifically-informed artistic recreations of extinct organisms and their world.
The exhibition features the work of Dr Mark Witton, a palaeoartist who works with universities, museums and media production teams around the world to produce scientifically-credible restorations of prehistoric life.
The gallery will show the development of life from its microbial origins to the modern day, focusing on some of the most significant, spectacular and unusual species known from the fossil record.
Visitors will see the bizarre communities of the Cambrian, the first land animals and plants, a myriad of dinosaurs and other fossil reptiles, and the species that shaped the modern world.
The free exhibition will be open to the public from 14th May, to 28th June, in the Portsmouth Guildhall Basement Bar.
The exhibition features the work of Dr Mark Witton, a palaeoartist who works with universities, museums and media production teams around the world to produce scientifically-credible restorations of prehistoric life.
The gallery will show the development of life from its microbial origins to the modern day, focusing on some of the most significant, spectacular and unusual species known from the fossil record.
Visitors will see the bizarre communities of the Cambrian, the first land animals and plants, a myriad of dinosaurs and other fossil reptiles, and the species that shaped the modern world.
The free exhibition will be open to the public from 14th May, to 28th June, in the Portsmouth Guildhall Basement Bar.
Do give it a visit.
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