Gabe Barcia-Colombo: My DNA vending machine
ガブリエル・バルシア=コロンボ: 僕の『DNA自動販売機』
Gabe Barcia-Colombo creates madcap art inspired both by Renaissance era curiosity cabinets and the modern-day digital chronicling of everyday life. Think: miniature people projected in objects and a DNA Vending Machine. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
魚の卵を売っています
マッチ箱に描かれた —
オリバー・メドヴェディク
バイオ実験室 —
grow E. coli that glows in the dark
イチゴのDNAを
DNA extractions about a year ago,
イチゴDNAを抽出するのを見て
fascinating, because it's so beautiful.
とても美しく魅力的です
being a beautiful thing before,
思いもしませんでした
特にアーティストは
科学に触れる事はありません
オリバーに聞きました
we can do this strawberries,
some friends, some artist friends,
アーティストの友達に
you could actually see DNA.
誰も信じなかったので
out some supplies right now.
parties at my house on Friday nights
奇妙なパーティーを始めたのです
表情が面白かったからです
でも皆が興味をもちはじめ —
集まるようになりました
do with your Friday nights,
ヘンなことかもしれませんが
think about a couple of things.
考え始めました
ウォールに似てるという点です
ネットワークを作っていると
one time a friend came over
言ったことです
person more rare than the other one?"
珍しい人だから?」
was the order that I extracted the DNA in.
順番だったのです
似ていると思いました
出るようなものです
what's going to be inside of them.
中身はわかりませんが
vending machine and the Art-o-mat all together,
アートの自販を思い出して
night drawing a vending machine,
スケッチを描きました
coils of a vending machine.
美しいと思いました
to create an art installation
about our increasing access to biotechnology."]
テーマにしたインスタレーション]
ヒトDNAの標本を購入できる]
対象にすることで
法律上の問題を明るみに出す]
the DNA Vending Machine
ペンシルバニア駅のような —
vending machines in that location.
設置したいですね
and a lot of my art projects
プロジェクトを通して
安価になったら —
DNA to be part of the vending machine?
この自販機に提供しますか?
いくらになるでしょう?
何をしますか?
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Gabriel Barcia-Colombo - Video sculptorGabe Barcia-Colombo creates madcap art inspired both by Renaissance era curiosity cabinets and the modern-day digital chronicling of everyday life. Think: miniature people projected in objects and a DNA Vending Machine.
Why you should listen
Gabe Barcia-Colombo is an American artist who creates installation pieces that both delight and point to the strangeness of our modern, digital world. His latest work is a DNA Vending Machine, which dispenses vials of DNA extracted from friends at dinner parties. He's also created video installations of "miniature people" encased inside ordinary objects like suitcases, blenders and more. His work comments on the act of leaving one's imprint for the next generation. Call it "artwork with consequences."
As he explains it: "While formally implemented by natural history museums and collections (which find their roots in Renaissance-era 'cabinets of curiosity'), this process has grown more pointed and pervasive in the modern-day obsession with personal digital archiving and the corresponding growth of social media culture. My video sculptures play upon this exigency in our culture to chronicle, preserve and wax nostalgic, an idea which I render visually by 'collecting' human beings (alongside cultural archetypes) as scientific specimens. I repurpose everyday objects like blenders, suitcases and cans of Spam into venues for projecting and inserting videos of people."
Barcia-Colombo is an alumnus and instructor at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. Read about his latest work on CoolHunting and in his TED Fellows profile.
Gabriel Barcia-Colombo | Speaker | TED.com