;![]() | Ljiljana Fruk and Marina Prijatelj believe that the main driving force in both science and art is the creativity. Artists create new realities, their imagination can run wild and they have a licence to experiment and push the boundaries. Scientists are not unlike artists, they just add a bit more of the analytical approach to exploration. They like to do both. Dr. Ljiljana Fruk on the photo, born in Krapina, Croatia, is lecturing Chemistry at the University of Cambridge. |
HeARTful Science We believe that the main driving force in both science and art is the creativity. Artists create new realities, their imagination can run wild and they have a licence to experiment and push the boundaries. Scientists are not unlike artists, they just add a bit more of the analytical approach to exploration. We like to do both. That moment when you realise that the purpose of your life might be fulfilled as the writing on the envelop says that you helped design a chocolate. And not one of them, but four! Pure ART. Made of high quality dark chocolate, they are filled with various delicious things to reflect the taste of the 3D molecules: walnut and sage liqueur for ethanol, bits of coffee beans for caffeine, sweet dry figs for glucose and bitter chocolate for dopamine. In collaboration with Marina Prijatelj from Croatian Choco Concept Source www.ceb.cam.ac.uk |
Address AtelierEcostyle j.d.o.o. Zametska 94 HR - Rijeka 51 000 Tel. +385 98 916 0723 E-mails atelier.ecostyle@gmail.comWeb www.cokolada.hr www.facebook.com/croatianchococoncept |
Ljiljana Fruk Dr. Fruk was born in Krapina, world famous site of Krapina neanterthal in northern Croatia, but although exposed to fossils from the early age, did not go down the archaeologist or anthropologist route but went into natural sciences and studied chemistry in Zagreb. She then obtained PhD in biospectroscopy at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow and then went to Germany, first as a Humboldt Fellow and then Marie Curie Fellow, to do postdoctoral research in nanotechnology at the University of Dortmund. Before coming to University of Cambridge she was research group leader at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany, for 7 years, during which she also completed her habilitation in organic chemistry. She is lecturer in bionano engineering in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology, where she works on light triggered chemical reactions, design of artificial enzymes, bio inspired materials and optoelectronic devices based on DNA and proteins. In spare time she has a habit of turning unpublishable results into art, acts as a curator of science inspired exhibitions and generally likes to engage in everything that can make chemistry more likable, such as making molecular chocolates. ![]() Dr. Ljiljana Fruk, University of Cambridge She says, "I am interested in science popularisation and a passionate amateur astronomer. Puzzled by any kind of intelligence, I like to investigate different routes to creative thinking. I love painting and I also wrote numerous semi-finished stories and novels that non-published yet. I followed the advice of one of my Zagreb professors, that nobody can truly be a good chemist without being able to cook. Therefore, I have brushed up my skills in a restaurant. I also mastered the skills of growing my own food and successfully demonstrated that one can have a full Mediterranean garden on a tiny balcony. I love being outdoors and plan going around Cambridge and joining some sport club, preferably one that has nothing to do with a ball." Source www.ceb.cam.ac.uk |
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