Skip to Main Content
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
Search

  • Admissions
  • Education
  • Research
  • Emergency & Reporting
Search
  • Current Students
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Donors
  • About
    • Frontline Medicine
    • By The Numbers
    • Strategic Plan
    • Organizational Chart
    • BUMC HR Resources
    • History
    • Clinical Affiliations
    • Basic Science & Clinical Departments
    • Faculty Directory
    • Alumni Medical Library
  • Education
    • PhD Education
    • MD Education
    • Master’s Degree Education
    • Dual Degree Programs & Certificates
    • Center for Continuing Education
  • Admissions
    • Why Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine?
    • Apply for MD Program
    • Apply for PhD Program
    • Apply for Master’s Program
  • Student Affairs
    • MD Student Affairs
    • GMS Student Affairs Resources
  • Research
    • Cores, Facilities & Services
    • Find Funding
    • Centers & Institutes
    • Human Subject Research
    • Resources
  • Giving
    • Why Give?
    • Who Gives?
    • What Can I Give?
    • Where Can I Give?
    • What Can I Attend?
    • How Can I Give?
    • Contact the Development Office
    • Parents Community
    • Donor Resources
  • Offices & Services
    • Office of the Dean
    • Faculty Affairs Office
    • MD Program Offices
    • Master’s & PhD Program Offices
    • Alumni Office
    • Development Office
    • Diversity & Inclusion
    • Communications Office
    • Events Office
  • News & Events
    • News Archive
    • Calendar

Frontline Medicine & Science

  • Faculty AffairsFaculty Appointments and Promotions – April 2025
  • Awards & HonorsDennis Jones, PhD, Honored with Early Career Investigator Award
  • ResearchStudy Examines How a Protein Called PAX3 Controls Genes in Melanoma
View News & Events

Magazine

Winter Spring 2025Boston University Medicine

A Dollhouse, a Sweater, Poems and Paintings: Medical Campus Creativity on Display at 35th Annual Art Days

Students gstudents admiring art hanging on wall
Student Activities

A Dollhouse, a Sweater, Poems and Paintings: Medical Campus Creativity on Display at 35th Annual Art Days

February 27, 2025
Twitter Facebook

Fifth-year MD/PhD student Kristen Segars has knitted hundreds of items in the three years since she joined a Medical Campus knitting club. Her palette tends toward bright colors like the explosion of patterns and color in the knit dress she hung at the 2023 Art Days, an annual two-day exhibition of student, faculty and staff artwork from across the Boston University Medical Campus.

handknit snowflake sweater

For this year’s artistic event, held on Feb. 17-18 in Hiebert Lounge, with 31 artists displaying more than 70 pieces of artwork, Segars was inspired to do something different. Under a pattern of white snowflakes, Segars’ Fair Isles knit sweater exudes the muted, earthy tones and deep shadows of the winter marshlands and forests she saw from her train window as she commuted from Boston to her clinical rotation at a North Shore family health clinic.

“I wanted a snowflake sweater, but not like a Christmas sweater. I wanted it to be like winter,” said Segars, who chose a thick organic wool from a local farm for most of the sweater.

Segars, who is considering ophthalmology as her specialty, likes being able to turn her brain off.

“You’re not having to memorize a whole list of enzymes,” she said. “It’s just nice to have something in your life that’s not science and medicine.”

Louis Gerstenfeld, PhD’82

Louis Gerstenfeld, PhD’82, professor of orthopaedic surgery, knows that feeling. His work focuses the gene expression of cells that play crucial roles in bone remodeling.

But on the weekends, you’re likely to find him tuning out the world, reveling in the tactile experience of smearing graphite with a finger to get just the right shadow on a landscape, bird or human figure. Gerstenfeld used to paint, but for a long time he’s been drawn to pastels.

“I think it’s the workability of the media. It’s very tactile,” he said. One of his three works on display at Art Days was a blue heron standing in shallow water, crisply delineated in thick black lines, standing out against a wash of marsh and trees.

“It’s primarily a way to relax and create something, as well,” said Gerstenfeld.

“This is my work-life balance,” said Keith Tornheim, PhD, with a wry smile, as he pointed to an assemblage of lab equipment and children’s blocks that spelled out “Work” and “Life,” all balanced on a carpenter’s level on a lab stand.

“I thought it would be highly appropriate,” he said of his artwork. An associate professor of biochemistry & cell biology, Tornheim has served as the facilitator for Art Days for more than 20 years.

As a child in her native Russia, Anna Parfenenkova, a research fellow in computational biology, was in an art club. While she used to paint, limitations of space and time mean Parfenenkova’s art is now mainly done with paper and a thin pen. The pen and ink illustrations she submitted to Art Days included a snail and a crayfish, each meticulously rendered in layers of thin black lines and took about five to six hours to execute, Parfenenkova said.

“Mostly, I do it when I need to relax or interrupt my thoughts about something,” she said.

Fiona Schicho has always liked tiny things. Enrolled in an MSW/MPH dual degree program, she loves creating miniatures and used to accompany her grandmother to a museum that had an exhibit of intricate, detailed dollhouses.

“I always admired them,” she said, and has been working on one large dollhouse since she was in middle school. Sometimes, she’ll go to Facebook Marketplace and pick up someone’s old project, a dilapidated dollhouse that’s been in their basement for 30 years, and finish it herself.

tiny dollhouse room

“I’m not submitting the dollhouse (to Art Days) because it’s too big to transport,” Schicho said. Instead, she put one of the rooms on display. She incorporates found objects like small pieces of wood and fabric, even the condiment lids from Chinese takeout that she repurposes as trays, into her construction.

Schicho is not concerned about what is considered art and what isn’t.

“I’m creating the dollhouse because I enjoy looking at it,” she said. “That’s my inspiration.”

Explore Related Topics:

  • Art Days
  • Campus Life
  • Campus News
  • Student Activities
  • Student Life
  • Share this story

Share

A Dollhouse, a Sweater, Poems and Paintings: Medical Campus Creativity on Display at 35th Annual Art Days

72 East Concord St.
Boston, MA 02118
Contact & Directions
Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube

We are Frontline Medicine & Science.

Every day, we learn, conduct research, care, teach, discover, and pioneer in places not everyone goes: the classrooms at the frontline of medicine & science.

  • Medical Campus
  • Search
  • Directory
  • Contact
Boston University
  • © 2025 Trustees of Boston University
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility
  • DMCA
© 2025 Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
Boston University Masterplate