Sep 06 2009

Court Allows Lawsuit Against Ashcroft: Former Official’s Bid for Immunity In Ex-Detainee’s Case Is Rejected

Published by Christina under Patriot Act, military

By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 5, 2009

The suit says ex-attorney general John D. Ashcroft should be held liable for wrongful detentions after Sept. 11, 2001.

A Muslim man who was detained for weeks as a material witness in a terrorism case can sue former attorney general John D. Ashcroft, a federal appeals court in California ruled Friday as it rejected a bid for absolute legal immunity by the onetime Cabinet official. more…

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Aug 30 2009

Blackwater Founder Accused in Court of Intent to Kill

Published by Christina under Uncategorized

The founder of Blackwater USA deliberately caused the deaths of innocent civilians in a series of shootings in Iraq, attorneys for Iraqis suing the security contractor told a federal judge Friday.
The attorneys singled out Erik Prince, a former Navy SEAL who is the company’s owner, for blame in the deaths of more than 20 Iraqis between 2005 and 2007. Six former Blackwater guards were criminally charged in 14 of the shootings, and family members and victims’ estates sued Prince, Blackwater (now called Xe Services LLC) and a group of related companies. more…
By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 29, 2009

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Jul 24 2009

Abu Ghurayb Presidential Palace and Prison

Published by Christina under Uncategorized

New bacteria cultures were created for an installation version of American Vectors which is being shown as part of the show Freeze!–2009 International MedTech Art Show at the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts. The show runs from July 25, 2009 through September 27, 2009.

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Jul 04 2009

Al Asad (bacteria culture grown in vitro) #2

Published by Christina under cultures

July 4th, 2009

AlAsad_070409_01

I’m preparing for an exhibition at the national Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts which opens in July. This image is from a time-lapse video in production now.

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Jun 25 2009

View a new culture of Serratia

Published by Christina under biolab, webcams

Please check the webcams page! I’ve started a fresh culture!

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Apr 17 2009

Fresh cultures coming this July

Published by Christina under Uncategorized

I will continure working on the American Vectors project this summer and create new fresh cultures for an exhibition at the Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts. Please check the “webcams” page in July!

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Jul 20 2008

Enduring Airbase cultures, summer 2008

Published by Christina under cultures

The links below document four experimental bacteria cultures from July, 7, 2008 through August 2008.

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Jul 18 2008

live cultures online!

Published by Christina under biolab, webcams

New cultures are visible on “The Webcams” page!
Balad Airbase Culture July 16th, 2008

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Jul 17 2008

The uncertainty principle: when things don’t go according to plan.

Published by Christina under biolab, studio, webcams

In quantum physics, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle is the statement that locating a particle in a small region of space makes the velocity of the particle uncertain; and conversely, that measuring the velocity of a particle precisely makes the position uncertain. The term “uncertainty” is used in different fields (law, physics, sociology, engineering, etc) in different ways. In this situation, I am applying it to my experiments in my lab.

I have been creating cultures with Serratia for a few years now, and I have my lab procedures down to a set of steps that yields fairly predictable results. Unfortunately, just as the summer began I was required to move my lab due to construction in my building. I was quite lucky, a colleague offered me a great space that he had no plans to use this summer. So I moved in and set up shop in this new space and ran a few tests in preparation for the launch of this project.

I set up webcams using different software to test the hardware end of things and for good measure, I created a few cultures and left them under the webcams for a couple weeks to test the wetware side of things. All went well and you can see the tests here. Based on these tests, I made the assumption that I could install cultures in my combination fume hood/light box, with webcams trained upon them, for the three weeks I planned to be gone at the ISEA conference. Which I did, but just before leaving I documented the cultures with my high resolution SLR camera. I thought nothing of the small spider I found on my light box (on the outside) that I squashed and killed. Obviously, the ‘not thinking,’ that was a mistake.

About two hours outside of Washington DC, I checked in on my webcams via my phone and noticed small distortions in the image. I though it was evening sunlight shining through the glass cover or some jpeg artifact that I hadn’t noticed before. When I checked back a few hours later, the “distortions” were unmistakably darker, linear and slightly red. This was bad. It meant something dragged, or to be more accurate: tracked, the bacteria from where it was applied to other parts of the dish. I was torn between feeling upset and amused. The little spider had friends, and they were “attacking” my culture like little insurgents.

The upset part: artists who use living materials always face more scrutiny that scientists. I can assure you I have been in research labs that look nothing like the sterile, beautifully lit labs of CSI and other crime shows. The labs I’ve seen are full of mostly male college students. This is a big generalization, but as a group, they are not known for their thoroughness, cleanliness or consideration when it comes to using shared spaces. I’ve seen labs that were complete pigsties with old pizza boxes and fast food containers everywhere. I took pictures, I have proof. They are anything but sterile. However none of this excuses the fact that I let my cultures get contaminated though knowing my own limitations on space and materials, I’ve only used a mostly harmless bacteria that one might find in soil, trash or even less than clean bathrooms. (You know, that red ring you may have seen in a toilet or tub could be Serratia marcescens. Mold makes me more sick than this stuff.)

The amused part: In a way, this is what I always wanted out of these visualizations. The idea of using a living form to represent the infrastructure of war, map globalization or visualize the effects of an ideology was to use the properties of living materials for their inherent unpredictability. I’ve made maps using Serratia with the hope that the bacteria would travel beyond the site of application. In this particular situation, I have to admit the spiders where there in the space first, I invaded their space. It fits the theme of this project quite well.

I’ve made a time-lapse video which shows the development of one of these cultures, the Balad Airbase culture, over a few days. You’ll notice I moved them around a bit while I photographed them in the early stages. On July 10th around noon I remove the lid of the dish so that condensation wouldn’t fall back on the culture and destroy the pattern I’ve established. If you look closely at around 3:30 AM on July 11th, you will see a couple dots that appear and disappear. Those are the spiders. there may have been only one.

click here for Windows Media Player compatible version.

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Jul 15 2008

Tallil Airbase Culture 07/09/2008

Published by Christina under webcams

Tallil airbase provides the military with the ability to lethal combat air power and predator drone aircrafts are maintained and launched from here.1.
Talil airbase culture July 9, 2008

Talil airbase culture July 9, 2008

Talil airbase culture July 9, 2008

Talil airbase culture July 9, 2008

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