Photosynthesising Flowerpots

> in collaboration with larbitslab

Photosynthesising Flowerpots is an experimental project that repurposes the traditional flowerpot as a living artefact carrying out photosynthesis. Emerging from the symbiosis between a computer-controlled, 3D-printed bio-structure and photosynthetic microorganisms, the work explores the potential of living materials within sustainable design.

Photosynthesising Flowerpots grew out of earlier research in Barcelona and a residency in Tokyo, where the artist duo explored Interspecies interdependencies between microorganisms, plants, and urban ecosystems. Photosynthesising Flowerpots seeks to redefine the concept of the flowerpot: no longer as a purely functional container, but as a symbiosis of human craftsmanship and living organisms. Their research focused on the symbiotic ability of plants to perform photosynthesis, regenerate, and supply oxygen to urban areas, with an emphasis on the growth patterns of potted plants during photosynthesis.

These explorations were further developed during a three-month residency at the Tokyo Arts and Space Center (TOKAS) managed by the Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation of the Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art. There, the duo created a flowerpot that photosynthesises and gradually reinforce itself. The work draws attention to the threats and imbalances caused by human domestication of the environment among diverse living ecosystems. While the pot structure provides a living environment for the microorganisms, offering them a substrate, moisture, and sunlight, the cyanobacteria carry out photosynthesis and gradually strengthen the structure of the flowerpot through biomineralisation.

By merging human craftsmanship with one of Earth’s oldest organisms, the work reflects on sustainable processes in the face of climate change. It raises ecological, ethical, and aesthetic questions, inviting an interspecies perspective in which human life is deeply intertwined with other forms of life. Through this lens, the project stimulates new ways of rethinking materials and production processes.

Crafts that have symbolised thousands of years of human civilisation, drawing us away from nature through art and the mastery of fire, are here brought back to a reciprocal relationship with the living. And as in the living world, each flowerpot is manufactured slightly differently from the next, depending on the local weather conditions of the place where it’s located.

Research for Photosynthesising Flowerpots is carried out in collaboration with leading academics and institutions. Professor Hideo Iwasaki (Waseda University, JP), an expert on photosynthetic microorganisms, contributed to the biological research. Robotic arm programming and digital manufacturing were developed at the KYOTO Design Lab by Project Associate Professor Gergely Péter Barna, with production support from Tomohiro Inoue. The incubator was designed and realised through the collaboration of Thomas Ortiz and Gergely Péter Barna. Biomaterials research was conducted in partnership with Associate Professor Kazutoshi Tsuda, while archiving support was provided by Takumi Yoshida.

The project has been supported by the TOKAS International Creator Residency Program and a Production Grant Flanders Government.

Exhibitions:
> New European Bauhaus Festival 2024
Fair Visions & Projects
Arts & History Museum, Parc du Cinquantenaire, Brussels
09/04 > 14/04/2024

> As Above, So Below
TOKAS Creator-in-Residence 2023
Exhibition, Tokyo Arts and Space Hongo, Tokyo
19/08 > 24/09/2023

 

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