
Living pigments: five bio art works where organisms do the making
A five-work curation of bio art and bio-design pieces that let algae, bacteria, organoids, fungi and cloud microbes participate in the form, from a glowing Chocó rainwater cloud to architectural skins grown from living materials.
The shortlist
| Work | Living system or material | Visual read | Why it belongs here |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria Cloud of Clouds, Natalia Rivera, 2025 | Rainwater, cloud microbiome data, fog, genetic visualization | A glowing artificial cloud held inside a dark plinth, with fieldwork imagery from rain collection in Chocó | It makes the atmosphere look like a culture medium, not empty space. Ars Electronica describes the project as an art-science installation mapping and cherishing microbiodiversity in clouds from one of the rainiest places on earth.1 |
| Plato's Prisoners, Cody Lukas, 2025 | Human-stem-cell cerebral organoids, microphone input, vibration, light and sound | A lab vessel, incubator logic, microphones and projection turn a dark room into a nervous chamber | It uses an organoid not as a metaphor for mind, but as a live signal source shaping the room's audiovisual behavior.2 |
| FadingColours, Noor Stenfert Kroese and Amir Bastan, 2022-2024 | Living algae cultures, coral-bleaching data, light, oxygen and temperature conditions | Five greenish vessels sit beside a projected ocean-data interface; the color reads as both beauty and stress | The work links algae cultures to NOAA Coral Reef Watch data, so the installation's living samples echo the conditions of coral reefs elsewhere.3 |
| Living Assembly: Building with Biology, Northumbria University and UCL, 2025 | Mycelium, microbial leather, bacterial cement, microbial cellulose, bacterial spores, active ceramics | Hexagonal architectural skins, vessels and material samples make biology look like a construction grammar | The London Design Biennale presentation gathers grown construction materials at architectural scale, from mycelium bulk materials to genetically self-pigmenting microbial leather.4 |
| METABOLICA, Thomas Feuerstein, 2024 public presentation | Algae, bacteria, fatty acids, PHB bioplastic, photobioreactor sculpture | A white exhibition space filled with tubing, pump-like forms and green biological circulation | It is the most complete metabolic machine here: algae and bacteria produce, process and partly degrade the sculptural material itself.5 |
1. Natalia Rivera turns cloud water into a microbial archive

2. Cody Lukas stages a conversation with a bodiless brain

3. FadingColours makes coral bleaching visible through algae cultures

4. Living Assembly treats architecture as a grown material system

5. Thomas Feuerstein closes the loop between organism and sculpture

What connects these works
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