• DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of Uwe Lierman and Industriesauger-TV, Cologne, 2003 Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of Uwe Lierman and Industriesauger-TV, Cologne, 2003
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Caitlin Gordon, Vertical Studio 2010, Your personal habitat Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Caitlin Gordon, Vertical Studio 2010, Your personal habitat
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Matthew Chambers, Vertical Studio 2011, Biological Future Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Matthew Chambers, Vertical Studio 2011, Biological Future
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of H.W. Acquistapace, Meppen. Twist, Germany 2006 Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of H.W. Acquistapace, Meppen. Twist, Germany 2006
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of Sebastian Högen and Prof. Dr. Hans-Henning Steinbiß, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of Sebastian Högen and Prof. Dr. Hans-Henning Steinbiß, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Studio, Thesis Project 2011, Towards the Biological Systems Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Studio, Thesis Project 2011, Towards the Biological Systems
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of the artist Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Image courtesy of the artist
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Nadia Kulczycky, Thesis project 2011, Towards the Biological Systems Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Nadia Kulczycky, Thesis project 2011, Towards the Biological Systems
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Lisa-Christina Laue, Vertical Studio 2011, Biological Future Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Lisa-Christina Laue, Vertical Studio 2011, Biological Future
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Christine Koch, Vertical Studio 2010, Your personal habitat Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Christine Koch, Vertical Studio 2010, Your personal habitat
  • DETAIL VIEW: CAMPUS PERSPECTIVESZbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Spatium Gelatium, Zbigniew Oksiuta Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future? / Spatium Gelatium, Zbigniew Oksiuta

Info:

TALK

I. Form, Processes, Consequences

Tuesday February 14, 12:00 PM

Theater


TALK

II. A Biological Future?

Thursday April 12, 12:00 PM

Theater

This event is FREE and open to the public.

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Detail View

Zbigniew Oksiuta: A Biological Future?

In his research, Rensselaer Architecture professor Zbigniew Oksiuta develops living biological habitats by combining art, architecture, engineering, and the biological sciences. His work looks beyond historical, social, urbanistic, and aesthetic factors to reduce the notion of space to its absolute minimum: the physical and chemical parameters that enable physiological existence. In this two-part lecture, presented as part of the Detail View: Campus Perspective series, Oksiuta will examine dynamic systems that transfer information and energy through a liquid medium. Using biological polymers as building material, he has developed liquid, jelly-like, and rigid shapes on a human scale for unusual gravitational conditions, which enable the development of new kinds of living habitats in the biosphere and in space.

The underlying narratives are driven by contrasting conceptions of the role of the artist and of time. The first sees the artist as anticipating the powers and dangers of techno-scientific progress through idiosyncratic experiments, with time as linear and progressive. The second sees the artist as re-constituting past historical ruptures and forgotten pathways to envision alternative ways of being contemporary with a more cyclical sense of progress.

Curator: Paula Gaetano



February 14—
I. Form, Processes, Consequences

The basic unit of life—the cell—has a spatial and architectural connotation. However, the living cell is not a chamber; it is a clump of sticky liquid protoplasm, which works as a chemical factory in dynamic communication with its surroundings. The cell produces and manages all of the processes that we need to survive.

Can life processes, which normally take place on the nanoscale of proteins, acids, and saccharides, happen on a macroscale? Oksiuta’s research explores the possibility for biological processes to occur on an architectural scale. His projects, Spatium Gelatum, Breeding Spaces, and Beyond Gravity use information embedded in biological matter to develop semiliquid membranes as bioreactors for breeding.

April 12—
II. A Biological Future?

In the context of his research on living biological habitats, Professor Oksiuta will present work developed by Rensselaer Architecture students in his Human Habitat as Biological Living System design studio course.

Bio:

Zbigniew Oksiuta is an artist, architect, and scientist who experiments with designing biological habitats. His work has been shown at venues worldwide, including the Venice Biennale (2004), ArchiLab d’Orleans (2004), ARS Electronica (Linz, 2007), Biennale of Electronic Arts (Perth, 2007), Center for Contemporary Art (Warsaw, 2007), Foundation for Arts and Creative Technology (FACT) (Liverpool, 2008), Biennale for Electronic and Unstable Art (Stavanger, Norway, 2008), Casino Luxembourg (2009), and Science Gallery (Dublin, 2011). Oksiuta studied at the Warsaw University of Technology in Poland, and has lectured and presented at universities, art institutions, and scientific institutions worldwide.

In 2010, he joined the faculty of Rensselaer’s School of Architecture, where he teaches a studio course entitled Human Habitat as Biological Living System.

More information:

Dates + times:

I. Form, Processes, Consequences : Tuesday, February 14 @ 12:00 PM

II. A Biological Future? : Thursday, April 12 @ 12:00 PM