MENU
NEWS
RESEARCH
CRUKMI logo image CRUKMI logo image

WORLD CLASS BASIC, TRANSLATIONAL AND CLINICAL RESEARCH

News

 

When cancer meets fashion

20 October 2014

Dr Esther Baena, who leads the Prostate Oncobiology group, teamed up with a Pennsylvanian fashion designer to create a dress showing how prostate cancer spreads in the body. Their science-inspired dress received the name Transmutation.

The dress was part of a project to take scientific research to a new audience. It depicts the tumour transformation process from normal to malignant and invasive cancerous cells and has been featured on live models at the Descience Runway show 2014 held at the MIT Media Lab in Boston, in the United States, in a garment exhibition at The Koch Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and more recently at a runway show held at the Liberty Hotel in Boston.

Other dresses in the Descience project include a garment inspired by marine life and another representing research done in fruit flies. They form part of the Descience project getting people to think about science in a more accessible way.

Dr Baena, who lives in Manchester city centre, shared photos and explanations of her research with fashion designer Arielle Gogh via Skype and email in her spare time.

Dr Baena said: "My studies focus on prostate cancer, the second most diagnosed cancer among men. I hope it has got people who wouldn't normally think about science or cancer research talking about this important subject. The biggest incentive for me as a scientist to take part in this project was so I could help transform my research into something tangible and visually appealing.

"We made the cell shapes look increasingly rough to show tumour progression and used stronger staining to differentiate between normal and cancerous cells."
 
The garment will now go on a tour around the world to promote science globally.