How Selin Balci Turns Microorganisms Into Living Works of Art
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In this episode, we are joined by artist Selin Balci, whose art begins not with paint but with living microorganisms.
A former forestry and microbiology student, Selin explains how she collects microbes from soil, trees, water, and even the human body, then isolates and cultivates them into controlled art pieces.
We talk about the science and art of sterilizing tools, nutrient mediums, contamination, and how she decides when to stop and when a piece is finished. We touch on her project, Echoes of Nature, in which mold consumes Polaroids of actual nature scenes to signify the end of nature as we know it, and 30 Faces, where people’s microbes reform the portraits of their faces over time, making them interactive.
Selin also ponders imperfection, rot, why contamination is not always a mistake, and the questions her art evokes about identity and sustainability.
If you’re interested in where art, science, and the natural world intersect, this is a rare glimpse into microscopic art.
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