After receiving such high calibre applications to our Horizon Artist in Residence open call last autumn, we are thrilled to announce that Kristof De Clercq, Roberta Gigante and Christina Stadlbauer (as a collective trio), HSURAE, and Laura Elidedt Rodriguez will be joining Bioart Society’s deCYPher project. Joining the sister project Bioindustry 4.0 will be Špela Petrič.
With an eclectic and impressive array of expertise and interests, we are excited to be collaborating with them and are looking forward to what their practices and perspectives will contribute to the projects as they develop.
During these two multi-year projects the artists will undertake research residencies in the facilities of the Centre for Synthetic Biology (CSB) at Ghent University (Belgium), the department of Bioscience at Wageningen University & Research (Netherlands), Prof. Vitor Martins dos Santos’ IBiomanufacturing & Digital Twin lab at Wageningen University (Netherlands) and AI consulting company ML6 (Belgium). Following their research residencies, Bioart Society along with Biofaction will support the artists to produce a body of work towards an end of project exhibition.
The Artist in Residence program also involves a series of workshop labs. The next will take place in Summer 2025 with an open call for participants set to be published in the next month.
Read more about the artists joining the projects below.
Kristof De Clercq, Roberta Gigante and Christina Stadlbauer form a transdisciplinary team bridging computational science, artistic practice and biological research. Their collaboration weaves together diverse backgrounds: Kristof De Clercq brings expertise in logic, philosophy, and artificial intelligence through his work with adaptive logics and machine learning applications; Roberta Gigante brings her experience in visual and performing arts, with a particular focus on site-specific interventions and installations; and Christina Stadlbauer adds her unique perspective as an artist-scientist focused on other-than-human life forms, combining her PhD in Chemistry with artistic research on biodiversity and interspecies relations. The team’s work emphasizes open ended inquiry and cross-disciplinary dialogue, embracing uncertainty as a generative force. Through their residency across scientific research institutions and collaboration with experts, they seek to generate novel perspectives on the relationships between traditional craft knowledge, biological processes and computational systems, creating both conceptual frameworks and material manifestations that challenge conventional boundaries between these domains.
HSURAE is an artist and educator based between New York and Taipei. Their practice embraces the concept of latency within nature and its artifice. Instead of working to reveal
or accelerate, they find small pleasures in the indeterminacy that latent space and latent knowledge offers. A sort of photogrammetry of the universe from inside Plato’s cave. Their
artistic medium, like their self, is never pure object, never pure subject; ranging from hot glass to fibroblasts, passports to fecal sports. They work towards unraveling the relational
geometries between humans, nonhumans, and machines through layered, multiscalar narratives of agency and temporality. Their current research entertains the irreducibility of
artificial intelligence as an aesthetic quality—a quality that, like latency, resists total comprehension but invites speculation.
Špela Petrič is a Slovenian hybrid media artist with a background in the natural sciences. Her artistic practice is promiscuous when it comes to form, spanning digital and bio-media, performance and participatory actions, but gravitates toward making-strange mundane relations between bodies, technologies, infrastructures and ways of knowing. Recently she has been looking closely at the automation of care in agriculture and medicine.
Laura Elidedt Rodriguez (A configuration of cells and proteins experiencing humanity) is a Mexican multidisciplinary artist based in the Netherlands. With a background that bridges biotechnology engineering (National Polytechnic Institute, Mexico), molecular biology (Skoltech Institute, Moscow), and Art & Science (ITMO University, St. Petersburg), Laura’s practice explores the intersections of living systems, new media tools, and speculative design on topics of multispecies care,rituals, identity and illness-health perception. Her work reveals hidden connections, fostering empathy and kinship across species. Laura has curated academic programs and workshops on art and science, mentoring emerging artists during the 2023/2024 Bioart Residency at YEMAA Center in Kazakhstan. Laura co-curated the “Staying with the Trouble” exhibition with Khristina Ots and the remote garden Pangardenia for Ars Electronica with KUR Future_Lab at AIR Gallery (RU). She received the 2021 Kuryokhin prize for Art & Science and obtained the Summer Session for Art and Technology with V2_lab and Metamedia.
DeCYPher takes an interdisciplinary approach by uniting academia, industry, citizens, and non-profit organisations. The project aims to impact various facets in science, economy, and society – fostering citizen-based co-creative innovation.The partner associations include: Ghent University, Wageningen University & Research, The Spanish National Research Council, Isobionics, ML6, Biofaction, Lantana, VIB (the Flanders Institute for Biotechnology), Barcelona Super-computing Center and Bioart Society. Read more about the project here.
Bioindustry 4.0 leverages advanced digital solutions – including next generation strain searches, AI powered digital twins, and new sensors – to help create and optimise innovative and reliable bioprocesses. These services are being developed for European research infrastructures, with the goal of not just benefitting researchers, but the European biotech sector at large. The project is made up of 20 partners and spearheaded by 6 European research infrastructures: BBMRI-ERIC, DSMZ, ELIXIR, Gaia-X, IBISBA, and MIRRI. Read more about the project here.
Photos;
1: Image: HSURAE, Water_soil. Photo: Walker Tufts
2: HSURAE
3: Laura Elidedt Rodriguez
4: Christina Stadlbauer
5: Kristof De Clercq
6: Roberta Gigante
7: Špela Petrič by Anze Sekelj