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Space Farming Project

Space Farming Project


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The Space Farming Project: Space colonization, techno-agriculture and the future of extraterrestrial biopolitics


In order to sustain human life for extended periods of time in deep space one cannot solely rely on support from Earth. It’ll be essential to become self-sustaining through a combination of in situ resource utilization, waste recycling, and space farming. The latter can provide astronauts and colonists with locally grown food and biogenic oxygen, and will be an indispensable component of any future outpost in deep space. The type of agriculture that will develop itself in outer space will be extremely technologically mediated because of limited resources and the hostile conditions in which crops have to be cultivated. From a biopolitics perspective, this will cause a significant shift in power relations. Because of the extreme dependence on technology, the lack of open reservoirs (e.g., no atmosphere), and an atomized commodification of life-supporting resources (every molecule is valuable), space colonists will live in a world in which they are potentially vulnerable to inequalities, power concentrations, and even coercion. Historically, colonization and agriculture have always worked with each other. But in the unparalleled conditions of space, this dialectic relationship is bound to take on new contours, with its own unique set of ideologies and ensuing ethical conflicts.

The Space Farming Project is a community art project that specifically explores these issues. It was initiated by SEADS and developed in collaboration with Gluon, Howest and PTI Kortrijk. Together with a diverse community of volunteering technologists, agricultural researchers, teachers, and students, different space biology prototypes have been developed. These prototypes represent an open source response to the question how we can create more direct ownership over the biopolitics that are inevitably being developed in outer space.

Participants: Hans Ameel, Vincent Benoit, Rufin Degrande, Germain Desmet, Jorden D’Hulster, Koen Fauconnier, Adriën Fauconnier, John Geldof, Bart Leenknegt, Dries Ongenae, Nick Pannecoucque, Rik Tanghe, Victor Steemans, Pieter Steyaert, Ramona Van Gansbeke, Angelo Vermeulen

Partners: Gluon, Howest, PTI Kortrijk, AquaTerra, ArAqua, Algimun

Funding: Vlaamse overheid









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.


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Victor Steemans

Victor is a graphic designer working and living in the beautiful city of Ghent, Belgium. He has been fascinated since childhood by science fiction stories, biology, the human condition, artistic practices and all things involving future thinking. He focuses on clear communication mixed up with conceptual design.


visit Victor's page