Jessica Helfand and I are building a collection of Periodic Tables and hope to publish a book on their scientific, visual and cultural history. We are looking for examples — historical or contemporary — of interesting, innovative, unusual, compelling, daring, exotic versions of the Periodic Table of the Elements.
Specifically:
Real ScienceWe have a fairly substantial collection of images of early (pre-19th century) systems for categorizing elements; extensive materials related to Mendeleev and his original Periodic Table; and alternative graphic systems proposed by chemists. We are seeking additional original materials to help us document the Periodic Table's history and evolution.
Applications: SubjectWe have inventoried Periodic Tables invoked as an armature for any of a number of odd subjects, including beers; fruits; cereals; nuts; sex; desserts; fonts; subversive elements; cultural elements; and more. We welcome additions to this ever-growing list and invite you to send examples.
Applications: FormPart of this inventory has revealed unusual adaptations of the Periodic Table in signage or on T-shirts; in advertising, annual reports and posters; on menus; in songs; even on buildings and in architecture. We welcome additions to this ever-growing list and invite you to send examples.
The Fine PrintWe need original materials or high-quality scans, as well as full bibliographic information and design credits. We will post all items received as comments to this blog thread; this will serve as a public archive of the items received.
Original materials can be sent to:
William Drenttel
Winterhouse
71 Undermountain Road
P.O. Box 159
Falls Vilage, CT 06031
william@winterhouse.com.
To launch this project, I'd like to share three recent finds:
01. Call for Entries for the Architectural League of New York, 2002Michael Bierut has fessed up to the sin of faux science, and has submitted this item:
02. Fast Company Magazine, January 2004An article on IBM's brain talent being for sale, art directed by Dean Markadakis:
03. Miracle of Science Bar & Grill Menu at MITAt a bar near MIT in Boston called the Miracle of Science Bar & Grill, the menu is a Periodic Table done on a chauk board. Photos to be posted after my next beer there, unless any Boston-area readers familiar with this watering hole care to beat me to it!
[Other periodic tables are viewable in our lecture,
Culture Is Not Always Popular.]
Comments [42]
The student works included a morphology from alchemical symbolism to the present chart configuration, molecular hexagonal frequency in elements and natural states of being, historical patterns in the discovery or elements, as well as the revealing of hidden patterns within the chart through motion and case-sensitive mutability. You can take a look at two of these projects at AIGA's LOOP online mag. Stacie Rohrbach, professor at CMU, has a well detailed review of her project online as well. If you want more details, I will be glad to help.
02.07.04
02:43
http://www.twinlakes.k12.in.us/schools/rms/Elwood/periodictable.htm
http://www.chemistrycoach.com/periodic_tables.htm
http://www.giftmugs.com/sampler/prof_symblos/Periodic-Table-Elements-Text.htm
http://teachergifts.com/necktie_small/nt27.htm
02.07.04
10:17
02.07.04
05:41
What is the genesis and motive of this project -- beyond establishing an intellectual and academic claim of purposeful knowledge? I understand the graphic design significance, but I'm unclear about the need and the genuineness of your approach.
The Periodical table is a scientific standard -- a chemical dictionary, user manual, map, and history timeline all rolled into one. It's not a monopoly board you can translate into different versions for greater mass consumption.
With all due respect Mr. Drentell, how exactly are you (or Ms.Helfand) qualified again?
02.10.04
08:03
02.10.04
09:02
I do not know much about chemistry, or the Periodic Table.
However, even late in life, one learns. Having assembled an important archive related to the Periodic Table gives us resources and materials that are not available to most people, even scholars. Further, part of being a professional is to know what one does not know. Our book on the history of the Periodic Table will have essays by leading history of science scholars precisely because developing such a project is best done with multiple viewpoints, and by writers with different areas of expertise.
Lastly, most of us have a clear image in our mind of what the Periodic Table of the Elements looks like. In fact, this image of the Periodic Table as "a chemical dictionary, user manual, map, and history timeline" is only one of hundreds of attempts to visualize the structure and relationship of the elements. Mendeleev's solution is not the only answer. [See Edward G. Mazurs, Graphic Representations of the Periodic System During One Hundred Years (University of Alabama Press, 1974). Note that the book showing graphic representations of the Periodic Table was published 30 years ago, and the window for a new book is obvious.]
One of the reasons we are so interested in the work of design professors such as Julia Wargawski at Parsons School of Design, Stacie Rohrbach at Carnegie Mellon, and Tony Brock at North Carolina State University is their engagement as design educators with hard science. I doubt most of them are chemists by training, but they are introducing their students to the science of chemistry through their assignments of the Periodic Table. That they are teaching in the Graphic Design department is not an impediment. As Tony Brock notes, "Professor Alton Banks of NC State's Chemistry Department supplied a refresher on decoding the elegant plot of electron shell configurations, etc."
These designers are not afraid of what they do not know.
02.10.04
09:54
http://platinumchromatography.com/periodictables.htm
http://chemlab.pc.maricopa.edu/periodic/spiraltable.html
http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/sfo/17280617.html
http://www.theodoregray.com/PeriodicTable/index.html
http://superdeluxe.com/elemental/
http://www.eblong.com/zarf/periodic/closeup.html
http://www.uky.edu/Projects/Chemcomics/index.html
http://www.mit.edu/~puzzle/03/www.acme-corp.com/teamGuest/R/6_553/index.html
http://www.scifi.com/scifiction/periodictable.html
http://www.chemsoc.org/viselements/pages/pertable_fla.htm
http://posters.seindal.dk/p358496_Periodic_Table_of_Sex.html
http://www.scs-intl.com/ptable_poster.htm
http://www.jokesnjokes.net/funny.pictures/periodic.table.of.mixology.htm
http://wildlife-nature-posters.junglewalk.com/Periodic-Table-Beer-Poster-409964.asp
02.10.04
10:20
http://www.kasanderfilm.nl/tulseluperproduction/index.htm
Damien Hirst's Pharmacy bar in London may also be of interest. His Spot paintings would be important to mention perhaps too as they are representations of chemical elements.
02.11.04
05:20
The periodic table of condiments
http://web.mit.edu/dryfoo/www/Info/condiments.html
02.11.04
12:51
Blog.Elements (currently down...here's a copycat)
The Periodic Table of Science Fiction
02.15.04
06:02
02.15.04
11:32
Jessica Helfand just bought this circular dial for our collection: Heath's Chem-Formulator, 1950.
http://winterhouse.com/blog/heathschem.363.jpg
Julie Teninbaum, a graduate student at Yale School of Art, "charted my roommate's unusual (read: insane) eating habits? I lived with her for four years and for that entire time, she ate the Same things, prepared the Same
way every Single day." It's titled, "Periodically at the Table."
http://winterhouse.com/blog/teninbaum.281.jpg
Tony Brock of North Carolina State University sent me information about the work of his student, Lucas Charles, viewable at the AIGA Loop site. Here's a screen shot:
http://winterhouse.com/blog/lucas.224.gif
An illustration by Thomas Fuchs for a piece by Oliver Sacks on the discovery of new elements from the New York Times Op-Ed page, February 8, 2004.
http://winterhouse.com/blog/periodic.tetris.376.jpg
An eBay purchase earlier today is too good not to share. A Goldwater political pin from 1964 presidential election done
http://winterhouse.com/blog/goldwater.205.jpg
02.16.04
11:31
Read the report at:
http://www.ewg.org/reports/bodyburden/
The "periodic table of contaminants" is at:
http://www.ewg.org/reports/bodyburden/dynam-contams.php
02.16.04
01:16
02.16.04
03:14
From K. Anselmo:
A cool link to a range of visual displays, educational installations and boxed collections featuring real samples of the elements in the periodic table. (For £1000 you too have can a 3-D periodic table in your living room.)
The Most Beautiful Periodic Table Displays in the World
http://www.element-collection.com/index.html
From Matte Elsbernd:
Since high school in 1992, Matte has been experimenting writing words with symbols for the elements.
Periodic Symbols as Language
http://electricalsocket.com/PC/
From Douglas Bowman:
A banner ad he created for Wired News, five-six years ago. "Wired News publishes the daily story of how technology affects our lives. I had a simple idea of using elements from the periodic table to capture the story Wired News so often told about ideas in Silicon Valley turning to gold."
Wired News Banner Ad
http://www.stopdesign.com/portfolio/advertising/wn_silicon_banner.html?fs=1
02.16.04
11:56
track him down - he's done a great peice on the periodic table, the website doesn't really do it justice
02.17.04
10:57
http://www.art-centre.su.ac.th/Online/2000/Multiple/12.html
http://www.dareonline.org/artwork/patterson/patterson1.html
02.19.04
06:52
02.21.04
12:44
02.24.04
07:08
02.24.04
08:53
Thanks to Christy Kilgore-Hadley for drawing my attention to this amazing peridic table of shelf-life (everything from ketchup to batteries to lipstick) in this month's issue of Real Simple magazine:
http://winterhouse.com/blog/shelflife.199.jpg
Also, reporting in from Iceland, Jeffrey Ramsey sends us an identity program for the photographer Thorsten Henn based on element number 90, Thorium:
http://winterhouse.com/blog/henn.321.jpg
03.06.04
01:30
While at Yale (GD 2000) I did a few projects that investigated the PTE. One is here:
http://www.spacemedialabs.com/periodic.html
It uses the Art Library, the PTE, and the Library of Congress system to create a series of books. I have be seduced by its form and elegance for years and found while at Yale that the Kline Science Library (which I am sure you have visited) had some great books on the PTE.
Also I have done a number of paintings related to it structure.
Let me know if you would like any more info and good luck
Kevin Jones
03.31.04
07:33
http://www.spacemedialabs.com/paintings.html
Kevin
03.31.04
07:39
03.31.04
08:20
http://www.element-collection.com/html/installations.html
04.01.04
12:52
This periodic table was spotted last week in Miami in the window of an Armani shop.
08.18.04
10:21
08.20.04
04:51
http://www.octel-corp.com/investor/annual_report/index.html
Annual report by Ideas on Purpose (NY).
http://www.seichemical.com/index.htm
Website for SEI Chemical, a specialty chemical developer, formulator and manufacturer.
12.22.04
02:06
This one is about to leave the building. Initially developed in 1998 and nominated in the first FlashForward awards in 2000 for navigation, it has hung online well past it's time. It came before VW's Periodic Turbonium site by a full year - with the periodic table (what else) being the common element? Enjoy.
12.22.04
06:28
A New Vision of the Periodic Table of the Elements by Philip J. Stewart.
"Many chemists before and after Mendeleyev have proposed a spiral image, to get the advantages of a helix in two dimensions. My Chemical Galaxy is the latest of these versions, using a starry pathway to link the elements and to express the astronomical reach of chemistry. The intention is not to replace the familiar table, but to complement it and at the same time to stimulate the imagination and to evoke wonder at the order underlying the universe."
07.20.05
10:26
http://www.anthropologie.com/companyinfo/store_locations.jsp
07.29.05
08:03
http://www.slate.com/id/2136418/slideshow/2136354/fs/0//entry/2136357/
04.15.06
02:55
http://www.humbug.com/links/periodic.html
05.14.06
11:36
http://www.chemsoc.org/viselements/
06.11.06
09:28
http://www.superdeluxe.com/elemental/table.htm
07.01.06
07:27
11.27.06
10:37
A typographic version of the "The Elements" by Tom Lehrer.
http://www.privatehand.com/flash/elements.html
And "The Visual Elements of the Periodic Table":
http://www.chemsoc.org/viselements/pages/pertable_fla.htm
12.05.06
12:36
http://www.visual-literacy.org/periodic_table/periodic_table.html
01.09.07
11:39
http://tetrast.blogspot.com/2005/03/periodic-table-of-aspects-of-humanity.html
02.11.07
01:16
05.09.10
10:02
http://flavorwire.com/107329/the-periodic-table-of-mad-men
http://flavorwire.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/PeriodicTableofMadMen-Flavorwire-Miethner.jpg
07.27.10
02:40
http://spiralperiodictable.com/
03.13.11
03:47