Luke Jerram

Jerram's creation of sculptures, installations, and live art spread internationally since 1997, which by 2022 grew to 104 exhibitions in 25 different countries, visited by over two million people.

[2][dead link‍] In 2002, he created Tide, an artwork consisting of acoustic sculptures demonstrating 'live' representation of how the moon's gravity affects the Earth, where gravitational information was translated into sound.

[3] In 2004, he began creating a series of transparent and colourless large glass sculptures of viruses and other pathogens, titled Glass Microbiology, recreating viruses such as smallpox, HIV/AIDS, Ebola, hand, foot and mouth disease and swine influenza.

[6] In 2015, he created Withdrawn, which placed a fleet of stranded fishing boats strategically located around Leigh Woods National Nature Reserve.

[8] He is a visiting fellow at the Faculty of Health and Applied Sciences, University of the West of England, Bristol.

Luke Jerram in 2017
Aeolus acoustic wind pavilion at Canary Wharf , London in March 2012.
Gaia 7m tall balloon of the Earth at Frauenkirche, Dresden .
Withdrawn consisting of boats stranded high above Avon Gorge in Leigh Woods , 2015.
Mars at Dorchester Corn Exchange in 2022