Art

DTU researchers contribute to artwork: “It was created by an artist who really understands natural sciences”

Professor Lone Gram and her colleagues from the basic research centre CeMiSt have contributed their professional expertise to an artwork by visual artist Amalie Smith, which magnifies the microscopic life in soil.

High school students hang out in the hallway at Viborg Gymnasium, home to the artwork Levende jord.
The artwork Levende jord (2025) was created by Amalie Smith and donated by the New Carlsberg Foundation to Viborg Gymnasium. Photo: David Stjernholm.

Facts

Artist Amalie Smith and curator Majken Overgaard have developed a teaching material on both art and soil bacteria in connection with the creation of the artwork Living Soil; a material that has been created in collaboration with, among others, DTU's Biotech Academy and which can be accessed via this link.

The work was donated by the New Carlsberg Foundation to Viborg Gymnasium in 2025. Lone Gram and her DTU colleagues are supported by the Danish National Research Foundation, among others.

On page 32 of the teaching material on Levende jord (2025), you can see Professor Lone Gram, wearing an Icelandic sweater, rolling clay for use in Amalie Smith's artwork. Photo: David Stjernholm. Donated by the New Carlsberg Foundation.

An ambitious work of art

Lone Gram's colleague from DTU Bioengineering and CeMiSt, Professor Lars Jelsbak, was also quickly involved in the development of the artwork, because he researches the interaction between soil bacteria, mould fungi and plants.

“The artwork Levende jord was created based on my own research and that of many of my colleagues. Researchers from Aalborg University also contributed to its creation. It is undoubtedly a very ambitious work, and I am happy that we have contributed to it,” says Lone Gram.

Participating in the creation of Levende jord has made the professor think even more about the importance of communicating research.

"We need to get knowledge and facts out to as many people as possible, not just our colleagues, but the general population. And this is where artworks like this can make a huge contribution, because walking around it makes you curious, and I hope it will inspire high school students to delve into the universe of microbiology and perhaps one day become skilled researchers in that very field," she explains.

The artwork was inaugurated in mid-August 2025 and, in addition to the terrazzo floor with inlaid terracotta elements, also consists of a redesign of the school's courtyard, which nurtures underground micro-life. In the courtyard, high school students can collect soil samples and plant plants that can be part of the microscopic life in the soil.

 

Contact

Lone Gram

Lone Gram Professor Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine

Lars Jelsbak

Lars Jelsbak Professor Department of Biotechnology and Biomedicine Phone: +45 45256129