Difference between revisions of "Hackteria FoodHacking - BioLab @ CynetArt - Dresden, Germany"

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'''Urs Gaudenz, Switzerland – 1971
 
'''Urs Gaudenz, Switzerland – 1971
 
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Urs Gaudenz is microengineer and worked for Swiss high tech companies in the field of micro sensor technology and brushless motor control. With his solid background in electronics, mechanics and software he is working in an concurrent style between the disciplines. After several years of experience as a consultant in innovation management he is now engaged as lecturer for product innovation at the Lucerne University of Applied Science and Arts. He is the founder of GaudiLabs and a founding member of the International Hackteria Society. As an experienced workshop mentor he was invited to Musée d'art moderne et contemporain, Genève, INTERACTIVOS'12 Obsolete Technologies of the Future - Ljudmila, ISEA 2010 Dortmund, Sci|Art NanoLab - UCLA Summer Session 2012 and many more.  His aim is to evolve towards more balanced collaborative entities in social action, business and technology.<br>
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Urs Gaudenz is microengineer and worked for Swiss high tech companies in the field of micro sensor technology and brushless motor control. With his solid background in electronics, mechanics and software he is working in an concurrent style between the disciplines. After several years of experience as a consultant in innovation management he is now engaged as lecturer for product innovation at the Lucerne University of Applied Science and Arts. He is the founder of GaudiLabs and a founding member of the International Hackteria Society. As an experienced workshop mentor he was invited to Musée d'art moderne et contemporain, Genève, INTERACTIVOS'12 Obsolete Technologies of the Future - Ljudmila, ISEA 2010 Dortmund, Sci|Art NanoLab - UCLA Summer Session 2012 - Los Angeles and many more.  His aim is to evolve towards more balanced collaborative entities in social action, business and technology.<br>
 
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Revision as of 15:54, 12 August 2013

Agrar is the New Media

Performance and participatory Workshop.


Agar 1.jpg

Workshop set-up

Agar 4.jpg

Agarose gel electrophoresis

Agar 7.jpg
Agar 10.jpg

Introduction

Agar or agar-agar is a gelatinous substance derived by boiling a polysaccharide in red algae, where it accumulates in the cell walls of agarophyte and serves as the primary structural support for the algae's cell walls. In Biology Agar is often used to provide a solid surface containing medium for the growth of bacteria and fungi. Research grade agar is used extensively supplemented with a nutrient and vitamin mixture in Petri dishes under sterile conditions.

Agarose gel electrophoresis is a method of gel electrophoresis used in biochemistry, molecular biology, and clinical chemistry to separate a mixed population of DNA or proteins in a matrix of agarose. The proteins or DNA may be separated by charge and size or length. The process is used in DNA Fingerprinting to compare different samples of DNA.

MyOpenPCR GelRun.png

Gel Box Workshop

DIY micro GelWorkshop.jpg

This new workshop introduces one of the key technologies of every genetic and molecular biology lab – the gel electrophoresis chamber. In a playful and DIY methodology, using only cheap and accessible materials, you can build your own little device in an IKEA tupperware, cast your own gel into a hot-glue mold, add samples, such as food coloring and run the gel in a battery powered electric field. If you dare you can then eat your seperated product, mmmmmhhh yummi!

DIY micro GelElectrophoresis.jpg


Agar is the Media Workshop

Agar is typically sold commercially as a powder that can be mixed with water.
Agarose gels are easy to cast and is particularly suitable for art, which accounts for the popularity of its use.
The gel is prepared by dissolving the agarose powder in an appropriate buffer to be used in electrophoresis.
A comb is placed in the cast to create wells for loading sample, and the gel should be completely set before use.
Once the gel has set, the comb is removed, leaving wells where samples can be loaded.
By applying an electric field the negatively charged molecules move towards the positively-charged anode during electrophoresis.

AgarArt.jpg

Agar Art

Materials

Materials provided by the organizer:
- 4 grosse Tische
- 20 Tischlampen
- 8 Steckerleisten
- Verlängerungskabel zu den Tischen
- Zugang zu Wasserbecken
- 40 günstige Tupperware (ca. 8x15cm)
- Lebensmittelfarben
- reines, ungesüsstes Agar-Agar (aus dem Reformhaus) - 2 Heizplatten
- 40 dicke Bleistiftmienen (1-2mm)
- 40 9V Batterien
- A3 white Paper (strong) - Table Salt
Materials brought in: - Aligator clips - Different colorants - High-Voltage generator - Sonification device - DIY Gel-Box (Acrylic)

Workshop Mentors

Urs Gaudenz, Switzerland – 1971 Urs Gaudenz is microengineer and worked for Swiss high tech companies in the field of micro sensor technology and brushless motor control. With his solid background in electronics, mechanics and software he is working in an concurrent style between the disciplines. After several years of experience as a consultant in innovation management he is now engaged as lecturer for product innovation at the Lucerne University of Applied Science and Arts. He is the founder of GaudiLabs and a founding member of the International Hackteria Society. As an experienced workshop mentor he was invited to Musée d'art moderne et contemporain, Genève, INTERACTIVOS'12 Obsolete Technologies of the Future - Ljudmila, ISEA 2010 Dortmund, Sci|Art NanoLab - UCLA Summer Session 2012 - Los Angeles and many more. His aim is to evolve towards more balanced collaborative entities in social action, business and technology.

http://hackteria.org/wiki/index.php/Agar_is_the_Media

http://learning.covcollege.ac.uk/content/Jorum/GMB_DNA-electrophoresis_LM-1.2-29Jan08/page27.htm