• Sustain 2009

    Growth Assembly

  • Herbicide Sprayer Nozzle, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp
    Herbicide Sprayer Nozzle, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp
      • Herbicide Sprayer Flexicable, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp. Click to enlarge.

        Herbicide Sprayer Flexicable, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp

      • Herbicide Sprayer Gourd, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp. Click to enlarge.

        Herbicide Sprayer Gourd, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp

      • Herbicide Sprayer Spike, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp. Click to enlarge.

        Herbicide Sprayer Spike, Daisy Ginsberg & Sascha Pohflepp

  •  

     

  • After the cost of energy had made global shipping of raw materials and packaged goods unimaginable, only the rich could afford traditional, mass-produced commodities.

    Synthetic biology enabled us to harness our natural environment for the production of things. Coded into the DNA of a plant, product parts grow within the supporting system of the plant's structure. When fully developed, they are stripped like a walnut from its shell or corn from its husk, ready for assembly.

    Shops have evolved into factory farms as licensed products are grown where they are sold. Large items take time to grow and are more expensive while small ones are more affordable. The postal service delivers lightweight seed-packets for domestic manufacturers.

    Using biology for the production of consumer goods has reversed the idea of industrial standards, introducing diversity and softness into a realm that once was dominated by heavy manufacturing.

    The product shown here is the Herbicide Sprayer, an essential commodity used to protect delicate engineered horticultural machines from older nature.

    (All illustrations by Sion Ap Tomos.)

    Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg
    07776 143313
    daisy.ginsberg@network.rca.ac.uk
    www.daisyginsberg.com

    Sascha Pohflepp
    sascha@pohflepp.com
    www.pohflepp.com