Nov 27, 2008
Biotech Art Masterclass

Over the course of one week in November, 16 artists from across Europe, took part in a special intensive workshop held within the Biological Science Department of the University of Stavanger and hosted as part of Article|08 – Biennale for the Electronic and Unstable Arts, Stavanger/Norway.

Led by Oron Catts, Director of Symbiotica this was a hands-on induction into the some of the techniques of Bio-Art.
EXTRACT FROM MY NOTES:
Day 1
Lab Primer / D.I.Y. Laboratory Equipment / Bacteria in the Environment and Self
Oron Catts is interested in how artists are working with life and asked the question:
Is there something intrinsically different when working with life?
Reasons why artists might work with life:
- warm fuzzy feeling
- solving real problems in real world?
- making strange, defamiliarisation (Victor Shlovski 1917)
- Critique of life sciences, P.R., Promotion (of life sciences) Aesthetics
- Research, Intervention, Activism
Strategies for artists:
- Representation
- Visualisation
- Interpretation
- Hands-on
In most human cultures there is tension when working with life.
Case Study:
Steve Kurtz, Criticle Art Ensemble
- Tactical Media Artist
- Sharing Biological Knowledge held by governments (for warfare) and corporations
- Charged with “Bioterrorism” under the PATRIOT Act – Grand Jury rejected the charge
- Judge threw out the case.
Authorities have strong agendas against democratisation of knowledge
What constitutes human manipulation of life?
Bacteria
Task: Take, and label, samples from four different sources in order to test for bacteria.
- single cell organism
- no nucleus
- DNA (circular) contained in cytoplasm
- multiply asexually
- replicate quickly, make colonies
Some highlights:
- extracting our own DNA using household products and ethanol

- making our own DIY laboratory equipment
- combining, at a genetic level, Jellyfish DNA and DNA taken from faeces
- transforming the genetic material of a found bacteria, causing it to glow under U.V. light

- harvesting bone marrow stem cells from a dead animal (which had been sold as meat)
- facilitating tissue culture cell division of (HeLa) cancer cell line, using a fetal calf serum

Jun Takita and his work – “Light, only light”.
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