GMU:BioGames/Azucena Sanchez: Difference between revisions

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== Project ==
== Project ==
I wanted to work with music and bacteria and that lead me to find works of people that tried to influence another organisms through music, one of the most common examples is plants. I found information of people that claimed that classical music helped their plants grow better. This lead me to find more about the electrical signals in plants, plants do have electrical signals and can feel (to call it somehow).
I wanted to work with music and bacteria and that lead me to find works of people who tried to influence another organisms through music, one of the most common examples is plants. I found information of people that claimed that classical music helped their plants grow better. This lead me to find more about the electrical signals in plants, plants do have electrical signals and can feel (to call it somehow). Many people has being studying and experimenting with this idea or at least the idea of making music through plants and its electrical signals. Here are some examples:
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYU18eiiFt4  Sound Builders]
[http://technical.ly/philly/2014/05/12/sam-cusumano/ Music with Apples and Plants]
[https://vimeo.com/60554403 Music with Vegetables]
 
Based on the lecture of Jakob von Uexküll and the first idea that came to me about architecture being the most simple form of artificial umwelt, I broke apart the word "artificial" "art" and "fiction".
 
I imagined


== Links of inspiration ==
== Links of inspiration ==

Revision as of 22:33, 19 May 2015

Some thoughts on Jakob Von Uexküll

"Nature may be compared to a composer who listens to his own works played on an instrument of his own construction. This results in a strangely reciprocal relationship between nature, which has created man, and man, who not only in his art and science, but also in his experiential universe, has created nature. [...] The formula of the reciprocal relationship between man, who must, in his self-world, create nature, and nature, which has brought forth the human species, requires us to consider the relationship between sign processes in nature and in language."

T. von Uexküll 1992: 281, 282

This quote got me thinking on Architecture and our artificial umwelt. Whenever we start thinking about human's umwelt we want to think of nature, the sky, the green grass and woods that surround us, the seas and every organism that lives in the planet. We have guarded ourselves from this nature though. Since humans began to create a social world for themselves they created and built and artificial world to protect themselves from their own environment (natural "disasters"). Architecture is the simplest and most primitive example of an artificial umwelt. Humans became designers of their own umwelt, we have destroyed it, appreciate it and feel it.

Project

I wanted to work with music and bacteria and that lead me to find works of people who tried to influence another organisms through music, one of the most common examples is plants. I found information of people that claimed that classical music helped their plants grow better. This lead me to find more about the electrical signals in plants, plants do have electrical signals and can feel (to call it somehow). Many people has being studying and experimenting with this idea or at least the idea of making music through plants and its electrical signals. Here are some examples: Sound Builders Music with Apples and Plants Music with Vegetables

Based on the lecture of Jakob von Uexküll and the first idea that came to me about architecture being the most simple form of artificial umwelt, I broke apart the word "artificial" "art" and "fiction".

I imagined

Links of inspiration

Revival of Organisms

Perceptions of a Plant... Could this be true?

A little experiment

Growing Physarum

I started growing physarum but it didn't work. They got contaminated, perhaps form the area where they are growing or from the food I gave them. I need to be more careful

IMG 0309.JPG