The biohazard of the Critical Art Ensemble.

. Art

18:03:02 The biohazard of the Critical Art Ensemble.
The latest provocative action of the group of Critical Art Ensemble is GenTerra , a performance that seeks to distinguish the legitimate concerns of the people transgenic organisms unwarranted hysteria. The liberation of bacteria in the air like 'e.coli' with a transgenic DNA, including a sample available for visitors who can take it home as a souvenir, however, has sparked fears of those responsible for the University of Washington where performance should be held 5 April next, who prohibited the dissemination of the bacteria samples to customers with strong concerns that the Biosafety Committee evaluates as 'potentially capable of causing infections', although the bacterium in question is located in our intestines and usually dies in contact with air. Steven Kurtz, a member of the group, insists that it is the uncertainty of the public, not sufficiently familiar with the material to create a situation contours 'dramatic', which reflects the artist's role to force people to confront, to times, with the less pleasant aspects of what is new and unfamiliar, they can not be defined through the usual categories of what is safe and what is not. This is part of the Gene (sis), a themed exhibition of installations and performances that deal with genetic modification, cloning and topics relating to DNA, which includes the first complete retrospective of the group and they are also involved Joe Davis and Eduardo Kac.