NEW YORK ART: A GIANT E. COLI STATUE

There’s a new art installation in City Hall Park in Lower Manhattan: a giant statue of an E. coli microbe, the kind that causes diarrhea. Titled โ€œEarth Potential: E. coliโ€, it’s a 10,000-times magnified electron-microscope image of the fecal bacterium that causes 265,000 infections in the U.S. yearly, with symptoms including cramps and diarrhea. Made from cut-out aluminum, it rests in City Hall Park as part of the larger exhibition, โ€œEarth Potential,โ€ by the Estonian artist Katja Novitskova. Aside from E. coli, the other pieces in the show include a huge earthworm, a nematode, and a human embryo magnified to resemble a clump of moldy peaches.
* This reminds me of Michelangelo’s Tapeworm.
* What’s next? The Museum of Dandruff, Ingrown Hair and Ear Wax?
* If you’re going to see it, be warned that the large brown installation on the west corner of the park is not art; that’s just something from a Great Dane.