Anne Marie Maes

Sensorial Skins

The installation ‘Sensorial Skins’ focuses on the sculptural capacities of everyday organic materials: skins, membranes and biofilms.
Sensorial Skins are complex surfaces of contact. They arouse our senses through their materiality, their textures, their pigments and their smells. Some of these fabrics are grown by bacteria, others are the result of transformative processes reminiscent of an alchemical practice but now grounded in fieldwork and scientific methodology.

The installation ‘Sensorial Skins’ at P.A.R.T.S consists of a table with skins, an aquarium with living symbiotic organisms, and a video installation in collaboration with choreographer Fabrice Mazliah.

Aquarium with Acetobacter xylinum _brussels (2024)
In a large aquarium, a fermentation process is taking place. The generative process is in a constant state of transition. This is the place where the Sensorial Skins are created. The
bacterial woven fabric reacts to variable invisible factors as temperature, humidity and the local enzymes in the water and the air. Every newly grown Sensorial Skin is thus the unique result of the specific site were it is grown, with its own metabolism and aesthetic specificities.


Table wih skins
The Sensorial Skin will expand, curl and harden with air temperature or humidity. They are called Sensorial Skins to emphasize their living and evolving nature.

With a flair of everyday aesthetics, the installations transform the natural in the cultural. They translate collaborative practices between humans and micro-organisms; they unveil the processes by which everyday organic matter is transformed into tactile bio fabrics.
In turn, these newly shaped materials become the elements for soft sculptures, their pigments catching the sunlight when draped over metal structures. They invite us to touch them. They live. Their responsive biomaterials shrink, harden or soften in response to the humidity and temperature of their environment.


Video installation in collaboration with Fabrice Mazliah
In 2022 Fabrice Mazliah developed a performance for the P.A.R.T.S students in collaboration with An Marie Maes.
The performance is inspired by the work of biologist Lynn Margulus and her understanding of the human body, as an ecosystem cohabiting with multiple other life forms. This performance explores what it means to experience ourselves, our bodies as not strictly human but as a community of interrelated and interdependent organisms, cohabiting and inter-reacting with one another, providing for each other, living together.
In this co-being exercise, various elements are invited such as the sensorial skins.


Anne Marie Maes is an artist who explores the boundary between nature, art, and science. She uses scientific and biotechnological methods to explore living systems and ecosystems as artistic subjects, created with biological, digital, and traditional media. In ‘Sensorial Skins,’ she focuses on the transformative power of bacteria, highlighting the natural processes of collaboration and symbiosis.”

Studio Lemercier & Before Tigers

All The Trees

All the Trees underlines the beauty of the natural world by enhancing one or several trees. Every branch and every leaf undulates and sparkles under powerful rays of light, offering a captivating spectacle. Through this sensitive and ephemeral intervention, visitors are invited to contemplate the world around them.

As trees are part of our everyday life, how can we renew our attention towards them and remain captivated by their familiar presence?

Our relationship with live beings as well as sobriety through low-tech are central themes in the recent projects of Studio Lemercier. In a world where the possibility of life on earth is threatened, the studio aims to question our use of technology. All the Trees is designed to have the minimum energetic impact as possible.

Credits

Studio Lemercier, 2022 installation audiovisuelle arbre(s), laser(s), son

Création : Joanie Lemercier

Création sonore : Studio Lemercier & Before Tigers

Co direction : Juliette Bibasse & Joanie Lemercier

Dévelopement technique : Martin Pirson

Production : Nicolas Roziecki

Pierre Devahif - MicroZoo - Inforsciences ULB

Diversity of the microworld

On the theme of biodiversity, CurieuCity#2, invites you to marvel at the richness and beauty of nature, particularly that which hides in a city like Brussels.

The microscope, or rather microscopes, allow us to observe this from an unusual angle. I say “microscopes” because there are different kinds, and different techniques for using them. Come and try out some of them to discover familiar creatures in a different way – the inhabitants of a pond, green plants, lichens, mushrooms… – and meet some astonishingly tiny creatures that are nonetheless essential to life on Earth. For example, an algae imperceptible to the naked eye but capable of making glass underwater. It has something to do with… dynamite!

And it is estimated that this group of living beings produces around 1/4 of atmospheric oxygen. Enough to help us breathe. [Oh, and that’s not all, far from it! It still holds many surprises, and not the least. So, would you like to get to know her?… Finally, we’ll be asking ourselves how it’s possible to classify this generally unsuspected flora and fauna. Can we understand their evolution?

Elise Elsacker

Fungi Expo: Elise Elsacker

Discover the cutting-edge possibilities of sustainable architecture.
See a prototype mycelium block that was grown and shaped using a unique combination of biological growth and robotic wire-cutting. This process allows the mycelium to function as a multifunctional formwork with self-healing properties.

place holder forest

Joske Ruytinx -Plant-Microbe Interaction (VUB)

Meet a mycorrhizal fungus

Fungi support much of life on earth. In particular mycorrhizal fungi or root-friendly fungi are important and altered evolutionary history of the planet. Around 475 million years ago these fungi allowed plants to colonize land. Today, almost all land plants form symbiotic associations with mycorrhizal fungi and rely on them to survive. However, these fungi are mostly invisible and hidden in the underground. Curieucity presents an exhibition featuring mycorrhizal fungi in collaboration with the VUB Plant-Microbe Interactions research team and contributions of Amandine Kervyn. Did you ever meet a mycorrhizal fungus? Come explore their diversity, feel and watch their action in our mini forest!’

Amandine Kervyn in collaboration with Joske Ruytinx

Mycorrhizal fungi artwork | The impact of fungi on plants in stress conditions

Dive into the world of mycorrhizal fungi with this specially designed leaflet. This informative guide will help you uncover the essential role these fungi play in our ecosystem. Learn about how mycorrhizal fungi attach to host plants and explore their profound impact on plants, especially under stress conditions. This leaflet is part of the “Recherche en Perspective” project by Ohme, which bridges the gap between science and visual communication. Since 2018, Ohme partners with La Cambre Arts Visuels and Université libre de Bruxelles to make complex scientific research accessible and visually engaging.

Sara Manente/ Sébastien Tripod/ Deborah Robbiano

Textile work from “Towards a Ruined Theater” (part of Fungi Expo)

The ‘Towards a Ruined Theater’ installation is the fruit of a unique collaboration between human, fungal and artificial intelligence. Sara Manente (choreographer and researcher), Sébastien Tripod (architect), and Deborah Robbiano (graphic and floral designer) together explore the idea of fertile ruins, where the theatre is transformed into living compost. Through images printed on textile, the installation evokes a space in perpetual transformation, where the creative process and decomposition become the essential elements of creation.

Visitors are invited to discover this theatre in the making, where fungi and mould play a central role, contributing to a reflection on the ephemeral and regenerative nature of art and architecture. This installation embodies the idea that nothing is stable, but that everything is constantly decomposing and regrowing, transforming the theatrical space into a living organism.

Sara Manente

Fungi Expo: Muffa Bar

If we could talk with fungi, which voice would they use? Where would we hang out?

The realm of fungi challenges our conventional notions of individuality, intelligence, collaboration, immunity, and sensoriality. While it is being extensively studied for its innovative applications and for its therapeutic properties, there remains a vast terrain awaiting exploration. Embracing once more the concept of ‘mushrooming’ as a methodology, we will immerse in the fungal imagery working in collaboration with microorganisms such as yeasts and molds, as well as the more familiar mushrooms.