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Design United.EXPO by 4TU

(Archive) Negotiating with the Garden

How to Make Pottery with Bees

This project was part of DDW 2023
The bee house with sensors — © Yuta Ikeya

In our quest for productivity and efficiency, we've relentlessly harnessed nature for technological progress, distancing ourselves from the time that other species deal with. Can we think of technology that helps us become more sensitive to such temporalities of more-than-humans?

Technology that facilitates negotiations for spatiotemporal conflicts between more-than-humans

This project explored whether technology could inform how different species deal with time differently through the case of solitary mason bees (Osmia bicornis).

Through his own experience of gardening, the designer arranged a pottery activity using the same clay the bees collect to build their nest. The designed beehouse in the designer’s garden monitors bee activity and controls the pottery wheel via its signal. When bees are busy, the wheel stops rotating and provides them with clay resources, thereby decentralizing the human’s time in the activity. Here, the technology facilitates the sharing of time, space, and material between the human and the bees.

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A female red mason bee plugging her nest — © Yuta Ikeya

The pottery wheel connected with the beehouse — © Yuta Ikeya

A plugged nest hole of red mason bee — © Yuta Ikeya

Andere deelnemers

Design United.EXPO by 4TU

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Andere deelnemers

Design United.EXPO by 4TU