Nick Laessing (UK associate) explores the interfaces of art, technology and eco-crisis. His research project life-systems, addresses how art can confront ecological issues such as food and energy production through speculative and revisionist technologies that encourage participation and engagement. He is currently a PhD researcher at The Slade School of Art and The Electrochemical Innovation Laboratory, University College London, researching evolving methodologies for artistic practice within discourses of the Anthropocene and eco-crisis.

As a Delfina Foundation UK Associate during the thematic programme The Politics of Food, Nick will introduce Plant Orbiter, a hydroponic machine he built to test the NASA theory that growing plants in anti-gravity conditions can increase plant growth and yield. The project engages with questions surrounding the future of urban food production and the role of technology in self-sufficiency. During the residency collaborators will be invited to cultivate plant food using the machine. This will contribute towards a publication that will reflect on the experience of ‘usership’.

Nick is currently exhibiting Water Gas Kitchen in the group exhibition Experimental Futures at Rostock Kunsthalle, Germany. Recent group exhibitions include No Such Thing As Gravity at FACT Liverpool and Taichung Museum of Modern Art, and The Promise Of Total Automation at Kunsthalle Wien.

The development of Plant Orbiter was generously supported by galeriepcp, Paris.

THEMATIC PROGRAMME

The Politics of Food:
Season 4


RESIDENCY SEASON

Spring 2019


Artist’s website

Link


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Please note all artist-in-residence biographies are accurate at the time of their residency. For up-to-date bios please visit the artist’s website.


Related Content

Season 4

Politics of Food

Programme

Growing Solutions

04/06/2019
Workshop

Politics of Food at V&A Friday Late

28/06/2019