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Output details

34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory

University for the Creative Arts

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Output 20 of 104 in the submission
Title or brief description

Cocoon, dual wide screen HD 16:9 video and sound installation 19.10 minutes (continuous).

Type
Q - Digital or visual media
Publisher
-
Year
2009
Number of additional authors
-
Additional information

This project was commissioned by the Art and Science Research Centre at UAL (ARTAKT) to mark the renovation of the Royal Institution of Great Britain. It developed from my work in zebrafish genomic research labs in London, Zurich and the Netherlands, alongside researchers from the fields of developmental biology and molecular science. The process that formed the basis for Cocoon involved the licensed ethical acquisition of genetically mutated zebrafish embryos, and the design and building of a bespoke video-adapted light microscope recording set-up to capture 30 hours of real-time in-vitro development. Visual recordings of the zebrafish’s developmental stages provided a unique way of presenting their ephemeral utility and mortality. I aimed to explore the artistic and aesthetic uses of microscopy in a haptic work, heightening the embodied sensual experience of visual probing and analysis. Genetic researchers in developmental biology study the co-ordination, spontaneous interactions, patterns and movements of cells as they occur in real time in all directions simultaneously. These architectures of life and death are called fate maps. In Cocoon, I allude to these fate maps as immersive liquid-like cascades of sensual living patterns. The pulses and patterns of the embryos encased in womb-like membranes are scaled up and cut vertically like a kinetic jigsaw puzzle. The highly choreographed, patterned construction of the work engages the viewer in visceral and metaphorical landscapes that reference human anatomy and gene selection methods in transgenic research. Methods of physical contact with fragile, genetically altered embryonic life forms are generally hidden from public view. My research is intended to raise questions about what it means when living organisms become artefacts under human control and manipulation. Cocoon was created in the context of such questions within current scientific debates, where the moral status of human and non-human life in biotechnological research is being addressed.

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
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Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
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