record

Thesis Info

LABS ID
00730
Thesis Title
Evolution of the Subject - Synthetic Biology in fine Art Practice
Author
Louise Mackenzie
2nd Author
3rd Author
Degree
Ph.D.
Year
2017
Number of Pages
349
University
Northumbria University
Thesis Supervisor
Professor Fiona Crisp
Supervisor e-mail
fiona.crisp AT northumbria.ac.uk
Other Supervisor(s)
Professor Christine Borland, Professor Volker Straub, Professor Chris Dorsett
Language(s) of Thesis
English
Department / Discipline
Fine Art
Languages Familiar to Author
English
URL where full thesis can be found
nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/38387/
Keywords
performative art practice, bioart, vital materialism, genetic modification, non-human
Abstract: 200-500 words
Acknowledging a rise in the use of synthetic biology in art practice, this doctoral project draws from vital materialist discourse on biotechnology and biological materials in the works of Donna Haraway, Jane Bennett, Rosi Braidotti and Marietta Radomska to consider the liveliness of molecular biological material through art research and practice. In doing so, it reframes DNA and the micro-organism through anthropomorphic performative practice that draws on myth and metaphor to allow readings of material that account for liveliness rather than use as resource. As such it contributes to environmental and ecological art practices that question our cultural entanglement with material and performative art practice that considers the nonhuman by artists such as Eduardo Kac, Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr, Špela Petrič and Maja Smrekar. The thesis does not recount a bioart practice, but a fine art practice that uses performative strategies to think with the act of using life as material. Amid the highly technical, accelerated pace of synthetic biology, the research slowly reconsiders methods and materials over an extended timeframe where liveliness, rather than use of the organism, takes precedent. By specifically acting as performative vector situated within synthetic biology practice, the relationship between meaning and materiality is brought under close scrutiny in attempts to infectiously transmit knowledge rather than generate lively commodities. As such, the thesis questions existing histories of scientific knowledge and proposes alternative stories that reframe aspects of laboratory practice through an aesthetics of care. The core of the research resides in artistic practice situated within the Institute of Genetic Medicine at Newcastle University, where I store my thought physically within the body of the living organism, Escherichia coli. The work follows a close reading of scientific protocols whilst exploring the affect of working with laboratory life as medium. This leads to the development of anthropomorphic performative works and sculptural works that draw on myth and ritual to reframe genetic material as lively material. Further, practice-based aspects of the research sit within and contribute to the expanded field of sound and sonic art, including artists such as Alvin Lucier and Chris Watson, to develop technologically embodied approaches for listening to laboratory life (audification of Atomic Force Microscopy data, sonification of DNA through synthetic speech neural networks) and for experiencing life at the nano-scale within the context of immersive audio-visual installations.