Thursday 19 March 2026 5:30pm to 8:30pm
Old Divinity School, St John’s College, All Saint's Passage
About
The event will unfold in three parts, each inviting audiences to experience and reflect on the intersections between art and science. Guests are invited to attend any or all of them as they wish.
Part 1 – Art and Collaboration
(17:30–18:15)
Artists and scientists involved in the SciArt project will share insights from their collaborations exploring pregnancy, reproduction, and human development. Through discussion, they will reflect on how these partnerships shaped their creative processes and the artworks featured in the accompanying exhibition (Part 3).
Part 2 – Writing Reflections
(18:30–19:15)
A conversation and performance featuring Professor Amanda Sferruzzi-Perri (biologist, Fetal and Placental Physiology), Dr Frances Myatt (classicist, Department of Classics), and Lara Gisborne (singer/songwriter), accompanied by multi-instrumentalist Matt Kelly. Together they will discuss their creative collaboration - drawing connections between Amanda’s research on pregnancy and women’s health, Frances’s study of childbirth in the ancient Roman world, and Lara’s songwriting inspired by these conversations. The session will include live performances of songs emerging from their exchange.
Part 3 – Exhibition(19:30–20:30)
The evening concludes with an exhibition of newly commissioned artworks and scientific images from the SciArt project. These works engage with themes of reproduction and reproductive health through diverse media - including textiles, sculpture, and painting. Using art as a doorway, this exhibits invites audience members to discover developmental biology in a way that goes beyond scientific jargon, creating a space for conversations between science and real life. The display will also feature other pieces relating to reproduction and women’s health from Cambridge collections.
Stay and browse the exhibition over drinks and nibbles and a chance to chat to the researchers.
Booking now!This event is organised by Cambridge Reproduction in collaboration with the Babraham Institute.
Image copyright: Emma Cammack (body painting) and Liz Webster (photograph).