Mari Mutare
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Mari mutare is a transdisciplinary design research project about biocompatible prostheses inspired by the early Christian being called Green Man, a human-plant hybrid that represents the nature-culture continuum. These objects are intended to address human exceptionalism from a post-anthropocentric, feminist and queer perspective. The aim of Mari mutare is to explore the multiplicity of subjectivities in ourselves and, consequently, to influence the perception of others. Arising from the emerging field of synthetic biology, speculative design methodology supports this proposal and it materialises through transhackfeminist biopractices as tools for creating knowledge and projecting other possible futures. The experiments are conducted around the Petri dish as an epistemic object. The dish contains a symbiotic assembly of human and plant cells that interpenetrate, digest and partially assimilate while grazing the categories of kingdom, species, gender, culture and nature. While this process materialises, human subjects test their future limbs aided by an augmented reality (AR) filter, as a proxy for the physical reality, to hack into self-reflection and subjectivity, thus projecting themselves beyond the self. This project is currently a work-in-progress and is supported by Pro Helvetia, Hangar Barcelona (EU Biofriction programme), Utopiana Geneva and Hackuarium.
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Vanessa Lorenzo Toquero, Hybridoa; Hackuarium
Vanessa Lorenzo creates hybrid media ecologies that incorporate people who are considered more-than-human, as well as the (bio)technologies that intertwine them. These interactive media assemblages are aimed at highlighting the agency of the more-than-human. Trained as an industrial design engineer and digital media designer, Vanessa is critically engaged with technology and seeks to enable strange sympathies between different species, thus supporting post-anthropocentric futures. Originally from Bilbao and currently based in Lausanne, Vanessa has conducted collaborative workshops that she has exhibited internationally, focusing on the radical poetry of the more-than-human. Her practice thrives on hacker-artist communities working in alternative spaces to subvert the dominant role of traditional science and technology.
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