Typosperma

typosperma.jpg
Typosperma
Oded Ezer

Typographer/artist Oded Ezer says,

The main idea of the ‘Typosperma’ project was to create some sort of new transgenic creatures, half (human) sperm, half letter. These imaginary creatures are cloned sperms, that typographic information has been implanted into their DNA.

A frequent topic of concept art is (hypothetical) aesthetic genetic modification. In at least one case, that of Alba, Eduardo Kac’s fluorescent bunny, such plans have been carried out to create an actual living “artwork.” This project is a little different. The modified “organisms,” sperm, have a lifespan of mere days – if you can even call it “lifespan,” since they’re just chromosome-carrying vehicles. Their whole point is to fertilize an egg. One of the diagrams on Ezer’s site shows the modified sperm approaching an egg (gamete); what will happen when they fuse? Is the idea to generate a modified baby with some further typographic alteration? Are these even human sperm?

Ezer leaves the big picture ambiguous, since the point (I presume) is to generate questions. Burdened by their bulky typographic inclusions and the little “serifs” on their flagella, these sperm are about as streamlined as a 1975 Winnebago. Sperm this abnormal don’t win races. The world is safe from transgenic typographic babies. . . for now.

Via Next Nature

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