Category: Food

PhoEf –  Edible and Sustainable Solar Cells…. In Your Mouth

PhoEf – Edible and Sustainable Solar Cells…. In Your Mouth

When I was at the Camp Pixelache event in Helsinki, Finland in May I learned about a unique project involving energy and food. On the Pixelache website, it had an article that talked about a past workshop called  Temporary photoElectric Digestopians WorkLab which was aco-creation worklab with research based experimentations

on the transformation of light energy into electric energy with food.   For the workshop, the participants worked with edible materials to create ‘e-tapas’ of different aesthetics and tastes by creating edile solar cells.  The aronia berry was used, which is a sustainable power source for both the body and electronic devices.

I did some research on the worksnhop and project, and learned that PhoEf is the work Bartaku who does projects that explore both the micro and macro realms of Photovoltaics, which is the conversion of light energy into electrical energy.

On the project page of his website, Bartaku writes that, “PhoEf emerges from a personal, transversal flight through the interconnected worlds behind and around photovoltaics; a technology based on A.E. Becquerel’s 1839 observation of the photovoltaic effect… PhoEf  is an attempt to reach, inspire and connect researchers, developers and artists.”  I also found an interesting five minute video of an interview with Bartaku, which helped me better understand the project and how it works.

Solar cells can be expensive, so Bartaku was interested in using simple technology to create cheaper and sustainable solar cells.  For the experiments pigments from plants (which can be natural or synthetic), electrolites, and  graphite or carbon are mixed together and squeezed between glass plates – making a solar cell.

Since you design the cell, which is a temporary photoelectric cell, you can choose the shape, color, and other design elements.   In the workshops that he leads, people make a cell, put it on their tongue, and then turn towards a light.  The result is an electric sensation of the tongue as the energy hits the cell and the tongue.

The goal of the workshops is to share the technology and idea with others who are not familiar with making energy and solar cells.   Bartaku hopes that other artists might think more about energy sources in their work, and make solar cells to power installations, outdoor activites, and elements used in performances.

His goal is to eventually make a solar cell made of 100 percent edible ingredients using the principles from the realms of alchemistry, photovoltaics, and cooking.

There is a flickr site that has photos from one of the workshops, which features lots of pictures with people with strange color shapes in their mouths.  I am very interested in this idea and project, and hope to be able to attend a workshop in the future.  Informaiton about making a PhoEf is on Bartaku’s research site, so go head and see if you can get your solar on!

Image Source:
PhoEf Project – Images on flickr

Links:
Video with Bartaku talking about PhoEf Project on Cobra TV

PhoEf Research Page – libarynth.org

PhoEf Project – Images on flickr

 

A “Collective Cake” and Local Food – Artist and Cultural Producer Milanda Sipos

A “Collective Cake” and Local Food – Artist and Cultural Producer Milanda Sipos

At Camp Pixelache, the festival/unconference event that I attended last month in Helsinki, Finland, I got a chance to talk to Melinda Sipos, who was an artist in residence in the Pixelache Micro-Residency program. Melinda is from Budapest, Hungary, and has recently been doing projects about food and sustainability.

The group Pixelache turned 10 this year – and at the event there was to be a celebration of the group turning 10 years old.  Milanda organized the creation of a “collective cake.”  For this – participants were encouraged to bring a local ingredient from our home country.  These ingredients were going to be used to create a cake.

It turned out that there were so many ingredients – that Melinda had to create a cake that was kind of like ladyfingers – and then she setup a buffet of all of the ingredients that people brought.  I brought local honey from Ohio.  There was chocolate, chocolate noodles from Germany, jellies from Finland, England, and Estonia, several bottles of alcohol, and some other ingredients.

The other project that Milanda tested out was to test a data-visualization model of the food that was served in the cafeteria on the main Pixelache day at the Arbis center, where the event was held. She developed ideas around catering. She wrote about the project, “Usually catering is considered as a necessary element of an event, but we tend to take it for granted that we are served with food and drinks. This experiment focuses on two main questions: how catering affects the ecological footprint of the whole event (especially traveling) and can we balance this out with a joint effort? In addition the goal is also to raise awareness on what we eat by providing information on the ingredients (their “stories”) and through a special arrangement in the restaurant space.”

At the event – there was an amazing carrot soup, a mushroom soup, a pasta dish with fish, and another dish that Milanda worked with the cook at the cafeteria to source out local ingredients, and to keep track of the food miles of all of the food.    I had a gluten-free version of the soup – and it was amazing.

At 4 pm – it was time for the 10 year anniversary cake.  The cake and the ingredients were put out on a table.  Everyone took some cake, and then added ingredients to the cake a la carte.  I tested 3 kinds of honeys, had some great jam, also some chocolate.  It was a nice moment of the conference – with everyone talking, eating, and gathering around the food table.

Milanda told me about some of her work at Kitchen Budapest  – a center of art and technology, and also about her new project called Based on Pig which explores food and culture.  Based on the Pig is a project that has the goal to discover the Hungarian Kitchen, especially the  eating habits of the contemporary Budapest people using artistic research methods. She and her collaborators are exploring what stories, traditions, and legends a certain food, ingredient or living creature used in the kitchen has.  Questions they are exploring include, “What information is available online about food, and what do we face in the market?” The project aims to map the cultural framework of our food-related decisions and also to do some kitchen experiments.  They kicked off the project with the ingredient of pigs.  They plan to go after many other animals and vegetables with the project.

To learn more about her work, check out  a video interview with Milanda on Vimeo that Pixelache recently posted. You also can read about the project Pig, and learn more about some Hungarian food at www.baedonpig.com/en/.

 

Links:

Milanda Sipos @ Camp Pixelache Interview – on Vimeo

www.basedonpig.com/en/

Kbaumlier Food Images on a  Billboard in the Detroit Metro Area until June 24th, 2012

Kbaumlier Food Images on a Billboard in the Detroit Metro Area until June 24th, 2012

Yesterday the Digital Billboard Art Project went live –  a project where artists can submit images to be displayed on a public digital billboard.  I have 45  images that are showing startinh yesterday, May 28th,  and will run until  June 24, 2012 in the Detroit Metro area (Macomb County), MI.

I submitted slides about food – and made a series of images where foods are shown in both abstract and recognizable views, combined with words and slogans often used by advertisers to promote packaged food.  A tomato with the word “SAME GREAT TASTE,” a papaya with the words “50% LESS FAT*” and images of rice, soybeans, a peach, and cheese are in the series.

Each of the food featured in the series has an interesting story related to genetic engineering or modern farming practices.  I am interested to have the images show in Detroit, a city where it is reported that over half of the residents do not have easy access to nutritious food.

If you live in the Detroit area you can see the billboard in Utica, facing west and can be seen by traffic traveling east bound on Hall Rd (M-59). The billboard can also be seen from a parking lot shared by Muldoon’s Restaurant at 7636 Auburn Road and the Utica Fire and Police Department. My pieces are 7 minutes of the entire 24 hour loop – and will be seen at : 1:09 AM, 3:29 AM, 5:49 AM, 8:09 AM, 10:29 AM, 12:49 PM, 3:09 PM, 5:29 PM. 7:49 PM, 10:09 PM.

The Billboard Art Project is a project that acquires digital billboards normally used for advertising and repurposes them as roadside galleries – showing images from artists. Types of work that may be displayed include images created specifically for the billboard as well as images of previously made art adapted to the format. No two Billboard Art Project shows are alike; each city features new work.

This year upcoming shows include other locations such as Richmond, VA; Salem, OR; Albany, NY, and Atlanta, GA.  The Detroit show is unique in that the images will be up in a month.   Documentation of the billboard is not up yet  – I will post when the roadside photos of the Billboard Art project are posted in Flickr.

Links:

billboardartproject.org/cities/detroit.html

Smog Tasting With Egg Whites:  The Center of Genomic Gastronomy

Smog Tasting With Egg Whites: The Center of Genomic Gastronomy

Ever get a mouthful of smog?  In big cities, people breathe it every day.  The Smog project by The Center for Genomic Gastronomy explores the taste of smog – by whipping up egg foams in cities with lots of smog, like Bangalore.   Why egg foams?  Egg foams are 90% air – so in making an egg white, you can actually capture the quality of the air in the taste.

The project is a combination of scientific study and conceptual art,  and has been done by Zackery Denfeld and Cathrine Kramer, with  seven other students of the Center for Genomic Gastormony.   The team was researching biosensors, plants and animals in nature that indicate the state of the environment in their natural state. Densfeld and Kramer wondered if they could test for outdoor air quality by whipping egg whites and capturing some of the air and found that by asking others to eat something made with smog created a strong reaction by others.

Smog is difficult to see, and the damage it causes takes a long time to show.   For the project, Densfeld, Kramer, and the students from the Center headed out to different parts of Bangalore with whisks, and made meringues from the batter that came back. Then next offered free samples to visitors, telling them about where they were made, and with what smog.

Can you taste smog?  Could you send sweet egg white smog treats to politicians, business owners, and others to draw attention to air pollution issues?  The team is planning to explore this – and to continue to generate dialogue about smog and air quality.

The project was part of the “Edible” exhibit at the Science Gallery at Dublin’s Trinity College earlier this year.  Want to test your air quality?  Whip up a batch of merengues out on the street – and see what you think after eating it.

Image Source:
Smog tasting Project

Links:

Smog tasting Project

About the Edible Exhibit at Science Gallery in Dublin

 

 

Restaurant Day in Helsinki : Anyone Can Setup a Restaurant

Restaurant Day in Helsinki : Anyone Can Setup a Restaurant

Restaurant Day is an event where anyone can set up a restaurant, café or a bar for a day.   You can set it up at your home, office, street corner, your garden, the park, or the  beach.  This unique day of restaurants started in Helsinki Finland, and now is happening four times a year in Finland and other countries.

The first Restaurant Day happened in May of 2011,  and 40 restaurants opened in 13 different towns. By the fourth Restaurant Day, held in February 2012 nearly 300 restaurants opened in almost 50 different towns in 12 different countries.  The next Restaurant Day is May 19th, 2012.

The idea of Restaurant Day is to have fun, share different restaurant experiences with other people and enjoy creating an environment where you can interact with others.   Want to make a restaurant that serves flavored flatbread, cake, coffee, or vegan hot dogs?  Check out the Restaurant Day website which has planning documents and information to get your Restaurant plans started.

Image Source:
www.restaurantday.org/

Links:

www.restaurantday.org/

Restaurant Day on Facebook