Competition: five Synthetic Aesthetics books to be won

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition

Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with publishers MIT Press to offer readers the chance to win one of five copies of a new book about developments in synthetic biology.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition
Human Cheese Making 2: Bottles. Photograph by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg, 2010

Synthetic Aesthetics explains the emerging discipline of synthetic biology, which looks at adapting natural organisms and processes to create new products, materials and even lifeforms.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition
Oscillatoria sp. Photograph by Hideo Iwasaki, 2012

The first few chapters introduce the science, followed by examples of collaborative projects between artists, designers and biologists – a mix of speculative ideas and realised creations.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition
The Synthetic Kingdom: Carbon Monoxide Detecting Lung Tumour by Daisy, 2009. Photograph by Carole Suety

These include a proposal by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg to develop bacteria to excrete brightly coloured pigments that colour your poo when they detect disease inside your body, and samples of human cheese created by Christina Agapakis and Sissel Tolaas.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition
Microbial Diversity. Photograph by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg, 2010

Synthetic Aesthetics is written by experts in the field: Ginsberg, Jane Calvert, Pablo Schyfter, Alistair Elfick and Drew Endy.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg book competition
E.chromi: The Scatalog by Daisy and James King with University of Cambridge iGEM Team, 2009. Photograph by Asa Johannesson

Published by MIT Press, the book will launch on 25 April to coincide with an evening programme of talks, installations and workshops at London’s V&A museum, from 6:30-10pm – more details here.

Competition closes 19 May 2014. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

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books to be won
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“We’ve been designing biology for 10,000 years”

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: in our next movie from Design Indaba in Cape Town, designer Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg discusses synthetic biology – a new field of science that could see designers creating artificial lifeforms.

For example, bacteria could one day be developed to excrete brightly coloured pigments when they detect disease inside your body, alerting you via vividly coloured poo.

Synthetic biology is a development of the age-old practice of selective breeding, Ginsberg explains: “We’ve been designing biology for 10,000 years or more,” she says. “Every crop, or your pet dog – it has all been designed in a way. It’s been iterated and iterated by human decisions into the thing that we want. The idea behind synthetic biology is that you can get much more control and start moving things across living kingdoms that haven’t interacted at a genetic level before.”

"A yoghurt drink laced with bacteria could detect diseases in your gut"

Ginsberg gives the example of E.chromi, a project she worked on with fellow designer James King and undergraduate students at Cambridge University, which won the International Genetically Engineered Machine competition in 2009. “It’s a competition where thousands of students from around the world get together to design a bacteria that does something cool,” she explains. “We were working with students at Cambridge who were designing bacteria that produce different coloured pigments.”

As part of the project, Ginsberg and her team considered the possible future applications and implications of their work. “We imagined that in about 2039 it would become culturally acceptable to drink a Yakult-type yoghurt laced with E.chromi bacteria that would start to detect diseases in your gut,” she says. “If you had a disease they’d start producing a corresponding coloured pigment. So coloured poo is the thing that everyone has taken from this project, as a new kind of interface for biological computing.”

"A yoghurt drink laced with bacteria could detect diseases in your gut"

Not content to simply present the project as a series of diagrams, Ginsberg and King created a mock-up of what the imagined excrement might look like. “We wanted to challenge the scientists and engineers who are actually inventing the technology with what we thought was an interesting aesthetic response,” She explains. “They’re representing it as cogs and machines, but this is biology. We shouldn’t be shy or coy about talking about what’s unique about this technology.”

"A yoghurt drink laced with bacteria could detect diseases in your gut"

This movie features a MINI Cooper S Countryman.

The music featured is by South African artist Floyd Lavine, who performed as part of the Design Indaba Music Circuit. You can listen to Lavine’s music on Dezeen Music Project.

See all our Dezeen and Mini World Tour reports from Cape Town.

The post “We’ve been designing biology
for 10,000 years”
appeared first on Dezeen.