organism: making art with living systems

The idea of making art with living systems is not new; you might even consider a garden or a goldfish pond to be biological art. What is new is the degree of control over biological systems and materials contemporary technology offers us. Topics on the organism weblog include technical, practical, aesthetic, and ethical issues related to making art with living systems. Artists, scientists, engineers, students, and anyone else with an interest in this area are invited to contribute.

March 14, 2008

Hortus Conclusus

Filed under: artists & works — regine @ 6:56 am

In 2001, Zeger Reyers vaccinated some everyday objects – found in the basement of Rotterdam Art Centre Witte de With – with oyster mushroom spores. Shortly afterwards, colorful fungi sprouted from archive boxes, furniture and fire hoses.

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via next nature.

March 9, 2008

Feeding plants with Gatorade

Filed under: exhibitions — regine @ 11:49 am

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Phoebe Washburn, It Makes for my Billionaire Status, 2007 (photo AFC)

Feeding plants with Gatorade and growing them in golf balls the artist transforms discarded materials into complex architectural forms.

See it at the Whitney Biennial until June 1, 2008.

Via artfagcity.

Last Summer, Washburn had a fantastic installation at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin. The work brings magic and poetry to the otherwise stiff and boring exhibition space located on the dreadful Unter den Linden. As you push the door of the DG open, you enter a totally different universe, with a greenhouse, a wooden construction and plots of the greenest grass.

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New York artist Phoebe Washburn has taken over the whole exhibition space with a factory. The work draws on “serious” disciplines such as architecture and ecological design but the factory is totally absurd, it doesn’t generate anything else than grass for its own sod roof, where it will eventually decay. The grass is the excuse for the factory to exist. It is a closed-off production, it starts from scratch, it looks well-thought and engineered but it goes right to a dead-end.

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As usual the artist has rescued and used as material the discarded and overlooked items that people have left on the streets. For the first time however, she’s been adding to the recycled bits of woods and trash, some rather large scale mechanics. Visitors are invited to enter the fabric and watch through plastic windows how a conveyor belt loop shuttles at intervals small plots of soil through different stations for light and water, which nourishes the growth of grass.

0aafactoryyyyu.jpgThese “plots�? are periodically tended by a “gardener�? who plants the seed, allows it to germinate in a greenhouse before shifting the organic matter to the factory where it will mature, and finally places the output on the roof of the structure where it will eventually atrophy and wither, removed from the sustaining system of water and light, thus exhibiting the full cycle of growth and decay.

You don’t see the gardener but he or she has left traces in the adjacent greenhouse: gloves dirty with mud, packets of seeds, hoses and all sorts of gardening tools.

In a documentary directed by Moritz Wolf, Washburn explains how the factory works according to its own set of rules. Most of these rules are dumb, they don’t really make sense but the artist follows them nevertheless in order to see where they will take the work.

My images.

March 1, 2008

Filed under: books & articles — douglas @ 4:16 pm

Angelo Vermeulen sent me this great article from a 1914 New York Times:

Grow Human Tissue Outside the Body — 1914 NYTimes article

The Physarum Dynamic

Filed under: artists & works — douglas @ 3:54 pm

The Physarum Dynamic

Experiments in Biogenic Design from The Physarum Dynamic:

We invite what we find beautiful in nature into our homes, nurturing houseplants for example, and mimicking Nature’s patterns when we upholster our furniture and cover our walls with floral designs. Less welcome are the life forms that we can’t see, the planets many forms of microbial life, yet without these, there would be no plants, whether these be the islands of floral, and incidental microbial life, we introduce into our homes or the blooms that we cherish in our gardens.

http://web.mac.com/annadumitriu/IUR/Physarum_Dynamic.html

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