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Biomodd [LDNw]

Biomodd [LDN<sup>w</sup>]


resources

Biomodd [LDNw] Google Photos album
Biomodd [LDNw] Facebook photo album
Biomodd legacy website


Biomodd [LDNw] was a 4-day Biomodd workshop held at Create Space in London, UK, from 24 July 2015 until 27 July 2015. It was co-facilitated by Angelo Vermeulen, Diego Maranan, and Pieter Steyaert, and produced by the Biomodd London chapter. Four installations emerged out of the workshop, each representing a unique interpretation of the goal to create a symbiotic relationship between natural and artificial systems. These installations were co-created by twelve workshop participants from a variety of fields--design, architecture, permaculture, computational arts, visual arts, and political studies.

Louis Rutherford, David Bradshaw, Doug Fraser, Joshua Eiffel, Krishan Nursimooloo, Jennifer Mitchell, Aistė Saulytė, Nemi Gardner, Angelo Vermeulen, Yussef Agbo-Ola, Antony Akabah, Christie Murphy, Galen, Hyoju Sabina Ahn, Jerry Fleming, Lissy Savage, Louise Rymell, Rebecca Harris, Rory Gallagher, Susannah Phillipson, Tanya Eskander, Torrin







Biomodd

Biomodd is a collaborative community-engaged art project that creates new relationships between nature and technology across different cultures around the world. In Biomodd, nature and technology are fused into hybrid interactive art installations. The core idea is the co-creation of experimental systems in which recycled computers and living ecosystems coexist and mutually reinforce one another. The recycled computers are connected into a network that runs a custom computer game. In this game, visitors, plants and other organisms interact in endlessly varying ways. Biomodd is an ongoing series of temporary experiments. It is always being developed on site with local communities, and aims to ignite critical conversations about our ideas on ecology, progress and our technological future.

E-waste is a primary resource for the project. Discarded computers are collected, and the participants learn to dismantle them. Subsequently, functioning computers are built out of the salvaged electronic components. These reconstituted computers are assembled into a local network, connected to the Internet. The heat that is generated by the computers is then used to to boost the growth of plants and other organisms within the physical network. Algae and aquaponics are used to liquid cool computer processors so they can be overclocked and run faster. In later versions of the project, sensors and robotics allowed for even more elaborate interactions between computers and biology.

Once completed, the hybrid network is used to run a customized multiplayer computer game. The Biomodd games thematically tie in with the overarching concepts of the project. They are either based on existing open source games, or are developed from the ground up by local team members. As more exhibition visitors join the virtual game, electronic components heat up, boosting the growth of surrounding plants, including algae. Such radical interdependencies are in fact echoed throughout the entire realization of the project: in the community of artists, scientists and designers who build Biomodd; among the visitors who directly participate in the game; and in the physical components of the installation (including the dependency between hot microprocessors and living chloroplasts).

Biomodd results in living immersive art installations. It opens a science fictional world in which biology and technology merge into idiosyncratic, fully operational hybrid systems. Through the grass-roots approach and the collaboration of culturally diverse teams, Biomodd translates the artistry, imagination and vision of a larger community. In this way, the installation does not only propose a visual artistic experience, but also a vision of a co-created future.

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Participating SEADS members

Angelo Vermeulen

Angelo is a space systems researcher, biologist, and community artist. With his multidisciplinary background, he collaborates closely with practicing scientists, while also creating multimedia art installations, and building communities through design and co-creation. In 2013 he was crew commander of the NASA-funded HI-SEAS Mars simulation in Hawaii. Currently he is doing research on interstellar travel at Delft University of Technology. He has lived in many corners of the world, is a TED Senior Fellow, and loves computer games.


visit Angelo's page


Louis Rutherford

Louis is the London Associate of the SEADS Network and has curated their Biomodd project in London and in European residencies with Supernova and De Warande. In 2015, he graduated with an MSc/Dip in Urban Regeneration from Bartlett College, UCL and continues to link with the university as a Core Associate of PPL PWR. He is Greening Coordinator of Participatory City and also works to install and maintain living walls and roofs across the UK.


visit Louis's page


Pieter Steyaert

Pieter Steyaert is an artist and transdisciplinary researcher who explores collaborations within artistic and scientific communities. His work particularly focuses on the context of astrophysics and exoplanets. Pieter is one of the co-founders of SEADS and has worked on a wide range of Biomodd, Seeker and Ēngines of Ēternity projects in Europe, the USA and SE Asia. He leads the development of tools and platforms that support the global SEADS community.

Pieter is fascinated by the possibilities, ethics, and shortcomings of the techno-realm. He shares and explores insights as an educator and researcher. His interests include artificial life, data-driven experience design, and art-science interactions. Pieter conducts research at CHAMELEON, an exoplanet research group which is affiliated with both the University of Antwerp and the University of Copenhagen. His research aims to use artistic methodologies to advance scientific ideation and research.

Links


visit Pieter's page


Diego Maranan

Diego is an artist, academic, and activist who works in the area of human-technology interaction. Through technology research and intermedia artistic practice, he investigates, critiques, and reimagines the relationship between humans and the world we inhabit. He holds a Marie Curie fellowship at Plymouth University; teaches at the University of the Philippines Open University; advises for WeDpro, a feminist nonprofit that empowers marginalized women and youth in the Philippines; and co-founded Curiosity, a Manila-based design strategy firm. As one of SEAD’s core members, Diego worked on an extensive range of Biomodd projects in the Philippines, New York and Europe.


visit Diego's page


Krishan Nursimooloo

Krishan is a copywriter and media-strategist that worked on the BioModd [LDN5] and Biomodd [LDNw] projects, and is a member of Biomodd [BRG13] in June 2021. He is currently studying his GDL at the University of Law while performing pro bono work at Lawyers for Nature, looking to specialise in Environmental Law, focused on the Rights of Nature and the crime of Ecocide. He is simultaneously launching start-up 'Sustainable Design Experience' agency and network Love Your Mother, which develops purpose-driven advertising, communication and branding for companies, charities and NGOs.


visit Krishan's page