John Chervinsky

Photograph by Stu Rosner John Chervinsky Like many people, John Chervinsky takes his work home. But what this lab engineer takes home may one...

hosptial

Photograph by Stu Rosner

John Chervinsky

Like many people, John Chervinsky takes his work home. But what this lab engineer takes home may one day end up in a museum. In his second career, as a still-life photographer, he places scientific bric-a-brac (a magnet, a tuning fork) alongside other objects (a candle, a lily), aiming to ask a question or illustrate a problem. “The creative side of good science comes from the same place in the mind as the creative side of making art,” he says, “yet scientists and artists don’t interact with each other as much as they should.” His own propensity to tinker, whether with photographs or lab equipment, comes from his father, who was a machinist and factory foreman in Niagara Falls. In 1984, after earning a degree in electrical engineering, Chervinsky moved to Boston, where in time he got a job as a lab technician with Rumsford professor of physics and McKay professor of applied physics Jene Golovchenko, and also began experimenting with photography. (He still works with Golovchenko, now as the laboratory engineer for the Harvard Nanopore Group; see “A Personal Genome Machine?” March-April 2007, page 11.) When, all within a few weeks in 2001, his wife, Kirsten, became seriously ill, the World Trade Center was attacked, and his friend and fellow photographer Guy Pollard died unexpectedly, Chervinsky found himself retreating often to his attic studio. Photography, no longer merely a hobby, helped him deal with a life that then was “just falling apart.” The work he did impressed the local arts community, and in 2005 the Griffin Museum of Photography mounted his first solo exhibition. Since then, he’s shared his scientific still-lifes with gallery-goers from Santa Fe to New York City.

Related topics

You might also like

Tk tk Iran

Artist Azadeh Akhlaghi reconstructs moments of Iranian political upheaval in a series of meticulously staged images.

Science and art capture the microscopic natural world.

Photographer and writer Morgan Smith chronicles life beyond the violence in Ciudad Juárez and other Mexican towns.

Most popular

An animal’s journey from grief to love shows how much humans need each other, too.

Meet Harvard’s 2026 Student Commencement Speakers

Two undergraduates and a Ph.D. candidate will address the graduating class on May 28.

The former economics concentrator brings his talent for crunching numbers to netminding.

Explore More From Current Issue

Graduates in caps and gowns celebrate joyfully, raising their hands in excitement.

Conan O’Brien headlines a star-studded cast

A woman with long, silver hair rests her chin on her hand, wearing a black top.

Author and Harvard Divinity School writer-in-residence Terry Tempest Williams finds beauty in the world around us.

A vibrant group of dancers in colorful outfits poses on a stage with shiny decorations.

The Harvard Arts Medalist wants his smash-hit Cats revival to reach “as many young queer people” as possible.