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<nettime> Vincent Van Gogh's Ear re-engineered |
This Ear Was Made With Vincent Van Gogh's DNA What secrets have been whispered into this creepy, living copy of the most famous ear in art history? By Erin Blakemore smithsonian.com November 10, 2015 http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/this-ear-made-with-van-gogh-dna-180957230/?no-ist Vincent van Gogh's ear is nearly as famous as his jaw-dropping Starry Night. Though its final resting place may never be foundâas the legend goes, he severed off part of his ear and then gave it to a prostituteâmuseumgoers in New York can get a look at the next best thing. ArtNet's Sarah Cascone reports that a living replica of van Gogh's ear, created using the artist's DNA, is now on display at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts in New York City. The ear is the gruesome brainchild of Diemut Strebe, a conceptual artist who partnered with scientists from MIT and other universities to create a copy of van Gogh's ear. Using DNA extracted from a stamp licked by the artist, as well as cell samples collected from van Gogh's great-great-grandnephew, Strebe and team created "Sugababe," an artificially grown ear suspended in a clear gel. Visitors don't have to merely look at the earâthey can talk into it, too. On her website, Strebe writes that "the input sound is connected to a computer processor, using a software program to generate simulated nerve impulses from the sound signal in real time. They mimic sounds recorded from an electrode inserted into the auditory nerve, when firing." Noam Chomsky was the first person to speak into the ear after it debuted in Germany last year. In a 2014 story about the bizarre art project, Cascone writes that the ear is "just one of a limited edition." Neither van Gogh's relatives nor the Dutch museum that bears his name want copies of their own. If "Sugababe" is a slightly macabre commentary on fame and art, it's also a tribute to a world-famous artistic body part. It's not certain what actually happened to van Gogh's ear: though he supposedly gave it to a prostitute during a mental breakdown, recent scholarship suggests that it was actually cut off by Paul Gauguin during an argument between the two artists. Perhaps van Gogh could have benefitted from 21st-century ear replication technology. Still, there's no telling what the painterâwho once proclaimed that the idea of exhibiting his work left him "absolutely cold"âwould make of artwork inspired by one of his darkest moments. ---------------------- http://diemutstrebe.altervista.org/index.html Sugababe | 2014, ongoing project In Sugababe, we have regrown Vincent van Gogh's ear. Vincent van Gogh probably represents more than any other artist, the stereotypical romantic image of the artist as a genius. He fulfills the sentimental projections of a broad public about the artist being necessarily poor, sick or insane as a type of inevitable precondition for a true and authentic work. But even the more reputable positions in theory of art tend to a certain mystification and to predictable patterns in dealing with the exceptional position of artistic creativity compared to any other form of human innovations. Art according to this position simply 'appears', becomes apparent and is not to be declared or explicable. The ear is grown from tissue engineered cartilage and is "identical" in shape to van Gogh's ear by using computer imaging technology. It is composed of living cells that contain natural genetic information about him as well as engineered components, replicating in the ear as a "living art-piece". The philosophical Theseus' paradox forms the literary basis of the scientific approaches used in this art-project, that is the replacement of the genetic code at the molecular level, the cellular organization at the microscopic level and the composition of tissues and organs at the anatomic level.In the late 1st century Plutarch asked in The Life of Theseus whether a ship, which was restored by replacing all its parts, remained the same ship. In the course of time many variations of the principle have been described. One of these variations refers to the title of the project. The famous paradox is carried out with biological material making a particular form of human replication, from historical or synthesized material, a central focus of this project. The ear is one of a series of a limited edition, made of different scientific components referring in various ways to the same principle of replacement.You can talk to the ear. The input sound is processed by a computer using software that converts it to simulate nerve impulses in real time. They mimic sounds recorded from an electrode inserted into the auditory nerve.The crackling that one can hear represents nerve impulses fired by the auditory nerve, here used to outline absence instead of presence. The speaker remains in soliloquy. Scientific description Foreign DNA has the ability to replicate in living cells if it is incorporated properly, and if such DNA can be expressed as RNA and its encoded proteins in that species.Replacement of new DNA that is present in living cells with segments of old DNA or synthesized segments of historic DNA can be used to recreate segments of DNA from a historical person that can be incorporated into living cells. By replacement of an entire genome a historical person could in theory be genetically "recreated" by inserting his or her DNA into the cell line of another human. The art-project works with this concept of replacement in various ways. The Custodia foundation in Paris provided an envelope Vincent van Gogh used in 1883. On the 3rd of September, 2012, samples of biological material were taken at Centre Universitaire Romand de MÃdecine LÃgale, Lausanne, from the stamp and the flap of an envelope. DNA was extracted, a small part of the mitochondrial DNA was sequenced, cloned in vitro and incorporated into living cartilage cells which had been acquired from Lieuwe van Gogh, a 4th generation descendant of Vincent van Gogh. As a male descendant in an uninterrupted male line he shares the Y chromosome with Vincent van Gogh and 1/16th of his genome. The mtDNA that was found on the original envelope does not match the van Gogh maternal linage. However, for the principal of replacement it does not matter whether the historical material stems from Vincent van Gogh or anyone else. At this time, only sequenceable historical nuclear DNA, typically derived from bone marrow or teeth, has the ability to replicate and to function within the genome of a living cell line. Consequently, the historical mtDNA from the van Gogh-envelope was used in both a symbolic and to a certain degree conceptual manner. The segments of historic mtDNA were introduced into the nucleus of the cells to grow the ear, attached to entirely synthetic segments of DNA, that produce a foreign fluorescent protein. According to the chronological development of this project in the starting format shown at ZKM | Karlsruhe, the historical mtDNA from the van Gogh-envelope was used and attached to additional DNA, consisting of a vector and a reporter gene, which was then inserted into the nucleus of the cells. It multiplies and replicates as the cell multiplies. In the course of the progression of the edition of produced ears, the described concept of replacement is carried out by using other historical sources of nuclear DNA for the replacement of chromosomes or the replacement of an entire cell nucleus by using nuclear transfer for cloning to reflect the principle, as well as from scratch generated synthetic DNA rather than purely biological samples. The ear-project is a series of a limited edition. It is made of different scientific components, that refer to the same principle of replacement. The art piece is presented in different states of its life. (Text: summary version) Concept: Diemut Strebe Scientists: Robert Langer, MIT, Charles Vacanti, Harvard, Ian Wilmut, MRC, Edinburgh, Vincent Castella/Christian Gehrig, University Center of Legal Medicine, Lausanne-Geneva, Jef Boeke, New York University Langone Medical Center, George Church (-2012), Harvard, Tessa Hadlock, Mass Eye and Ear, Joseph Vacanti, Harvard, Peter Cariani, Boston University, Bertrand Delgutte, Harvard, Mass Eye and Ear -- ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com |OPEN PGP: 056C E7D3 9B25 CAE1 336D 6D2F 0BBB 5B95 0C9F F2AC # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org