Rhonda Roland Shearer

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Rhonda Roland Shearer is a sculptor, scholar, and journalist, who founded the nonprofit organization Art Science Research Laboratory with her late husband Stephen Jay Gould. The mission statement avows that the lab aims to "infuse intellectual rigor and critical thinking in disciplines that range from Academics to Journalism. ASRL researches conventional beliefs and misinformation and transmits its findings by means of scientific methods and state-of-the-art computer technologies."[1]

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[edit] Sculpture

As a sculptor, her work has been exhibited throughout New York, Los Angeles, and London, as well as smaller cities throughout the United States. One of her works reflected her feminist principles by calling attention to the gender disparity in the public art that New York City commissions. Of the hundreds of monuments erected throughout the city, she emphasized, only three depict real women: Gertrude Stein, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Joan of Arc. In the traveling museum exhibition catalogue, Shearer described her exhibition "Woman's Work" by writing, "I depicted large scale images of motherhood and housework in heroic size, as are our most sacred monuments."[2] The New York Times profiled the exhibit in an article "Celebrating Heroines of Drudgery."[3]

In 1996, she exhibited Shapes Of Nature, 10 Years Of Bronze Sculptures in The New York Botanical Garden, which experimented in the use of fractals as a new way to look at space and form. Whereas many mathematicians like Benoit Mandelbrot understood fractals in the form of computerized models of equations, others like Nathaniel Friedman and Shearer recognized that fractals are also found in nature. The Economist quoted her as saying, "For the artists, nothing is more fundamental."[4]

Always fascinated about the intersection between science and art, Shearer exhibited Pangea -- inspired by chaos theory -- in New York and Los Angeles from 1990-1991.

[edit] Art History

As an art historian, Shearer posited that many of Marcel Duchamp's supposedly "readymade" works of art were actually created by Duchamp. Research that Shearer published in 1997, "Marcel Duchamp's Impossible Bed and Other 'Not' Readymade Objects: A Possible Route of Influence From Art To Science," lays out these arguments. In the paper, she showed that research of items like snow shovels and bottle racks in use at the time failed to turn up any identical matches to photographs of the originals. However, there are accounts of Walter Arensberg and Joseph Stella being with Duchamp when he purchased the original Fountain at J. L. Mott Iron Works. Such investigations are hampered by the fact that few of the original "readymades" survive, having been lost or destroyed. Those which exist today are predominantly reproductions authorized or designed by Duchamp in the final two decades of his life. Shearer also asserts that the artwork L.H.O.O.Q. which is recorded to be a poster-copy of the Mona Lisa with a moustache drawn on it, is not the true Mona Lisa, but Duchamp's own slightly-different version that he modelled partly after himself. The inference of Shearer's viewpoint is that Duchamp was creating an even larger joke than he admitted.[5]

Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci. Original painting from circa 1503–1507. Oil on poplar.
Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci. Original painting from circa 1503–1507. Oil on poplar.
L.H.O.O.Q., Duchamp's parody of the Mona Lisa adds a goatee and moustache.
L.H.O.O.Q., Duchamp's parody of the Mona Lisa adds a goatee and moustache.

[edit] Journalism and Media Ethics

Art Science Research Laboratory also operates the media ethics websites StinkyJournalism.org and CheckYourFacts.org. Both non-partisan websites use the scientific method to critique the mainstream media and uncover hoaxes.

[edit] Monster Pig

Jamison Stone poses with slain pigCredit: Melynne Stone
Jamison Stone poses with slain pig
Credit: Melynne Stone

StinkyJournalism.org gained widespread media attention after it uncovered evidence that the shooting of a "Monster Pig" was, in fact, a hoax. "Monster Pig," also known as "Hogzilla II" and "Pigzilla," is the name of a large domestic farm-raised pig that was shot during a canned hunt on May 3, 2007 by an eleven-year-old boy, Jamison Stone. The location is disclosed as a 150 acre low fence enclosure within the larger 2,500 acre (1,012 hectare) commercial hunting preserve called Lost Creek Plantation,[6] outside Anniston, Alabama, USA. According to the hunters (there were no independent witnesses), the pig weighed 1,051 lb (477 kg).

Several days after the story broke, suspicion mounted over the authenticity of the photographic evidence. StinkyJournalism.org interviewed a retired New York University physicist, Dr. Richard Brandt, who used perspective geometry to measure the photograph and showed that, as represented,the pig would be 15 ft (4.57 m) long--much larger than the 9 feet 4 inches claimed.[7] Brandt's same study further measured that the boy in the photo was standing several metres behind the pig, creating the optical illusion that the animal was larger than its actual size[8]. Others claim the photographs were digitally altered.[9]

StinkyJournalism.org discovered that although the Lost Creek Plantation web site boasted that the hunting there was "legendary," the operation was only four months old at the time of the hunt. Eddy Borden had big plans for developing his canned-hunt operation, the Clay County Times reported shortly before the hunt.[10]

In the aftermath of the story, an Alabama grand jury investigated the 11-year-old aspiring sharpshooter Jamison Stone on animal cruelty charges, along with his father Mike Stone; expedition leaders Keith O'Neal and Charles Williams; and Lost Creek Plantation grounds owner Eddy Borden.[11]

The article ("Exclusive: Grand jury to investigate 'monster pig' kill") revealed information subpoenaed by the Clay County District Attorney Fred Thompson, which includes hundreds of hours of on-the-record interviews and research by StinkyJournalism.org director Rhonda Roland Shearer.[3]

[edit] William Langewiesche

As described by The New York Observer, Shearer "took on" journalist William Langewiesche after the latter published the controversial book on the September 11, 2001 attacks, American Ground: Unbuilding the World Trade Center. Using forensic evidence, Shearer criticized the author's troubling claims that the FDNY looted jeans from the wreckage of Ground Zero.

The Observer quotes Shearer as saying that "she has sent both Farrar, Straus and Giroux and The Atlantic Monthly a 33-page blow-by-blow rebuttal of 56 facts and statements in the three-part magazine article that was the basis of the book. In it, the authors of the rebuttal — Ms. Shearer and a group of New York City firemen, Port Authority and NYPD officers, construction workers and family members of the victims — write: 'Throughout his articles, Mr. Langewiesche continuously uses slanderous innuendo to denigrate uniformed rescue personnel and construction workers. Such statements are libelous.'"

[edit] Gail Sheehy

The Art Science Research Laboratory released a 65-page report based on an article Gail Sheehy published in The New York Observer on Feb. 16, 2004 critical of the 9/11 Commission.

"To publicly accuse parties of potential criminal wrongdoing is serious and damaging. That the accusations were based on facts that were only later checked and proven wrong is especially egregious," Shearer wrote in the report. "The 9/11 Commission and specifically [Executive Director] Philip Zelikow were defamed."[12] [13]

[edit] References