1000 Tree Clones
Here's an interesting take on cloning. Think biohippetech. Let's take 1000 cloned trees and plant them across San Francisco to…
Here's an interesting take on cloning. Think biohippetech. Let's take 1000 cloned trees and plant them across San Francisco to see what happens. The following is an except from their site explaining it in more detail: Cloning has made it possible to Xerox copy organic life and confound the traditional understanding of individualism and authenticity. In the public sphere, genetics is often reduced to 'finding the gene for .... (fill in the blank)', misrepresenting the complex interactions with environmental influences. The debate that contrasts genetic determinism and environmental influence has consequences for understanding our own agency in the world, be it predetermined by genetic inevitability or constructed by our actions and environment. The OneTrees project is a forum for public involvement in this debate, a shared experience with actual material consequences. OneTrees, is actually one thousand tree(s), clones, micro-propagated in culture. The clones, were exhibited together as plantlets at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, and later as saplings at Exit Art in New York and at the Exploratorium, San Francisco. The exhibitions provided the opportunity to see the similarities and differences between the clones. Beginning Spring 2003 the clones have be planted in public sites throughout the San Francisco Bay Area including: Golden Gate Park; 220 fronting property owners; SF School District Schools; BART stations; Yerba Beuna Performing Arts Center; Union Square and other sites. POND are producing the project and coordinating the planting. Friends of the Urban Forest have also provided invaluable assistance. Because the trees are genetically identical, in the subsequent years they will render the social and environmental differences to which they are exposed. The tree(s) slow and consistent growth will record the experiences and contingencies that each public site provides. They will become a networked instrument that maps the micro climates of the Bay Area, not connected via the Internet, but through their biological material. However, there are also electronic components of the project which include Artificial Life (A-Life) trees that simulate the growth of the biological trees on your computer desktop. The growth rate of these simulated trees is controlled by a Carbon Dioxide meter(CO2 ). The project juxtaposes the simulated (A-Life) trees and their biological counterparts, demonstrating what simulation don't represent as much as what they do. Each of the tree(s) can be compared by viewers in the public places they are planted, to become a long, quiet and persisting spectacle of the Bay Area's diverse environment.and a demonstration of a very different information environment. More info here