-
What if our plants
-
could sense the toxicity
levels in the soil
-
and express that toxicity
through the color of its leaves?
-
What if those plants could also
remove those toxins from the soil?
-
Instead, what if those plants
-
grew their own packaging,
-
or were designed to only be harvested
-
by their owners' own patented machines?
-
What happens when biological design
-
is driven by the motivations
of mass-produced commodities?
-
What kind of world would that be?
-
My name is Ani, and I'm a designer
and researcher at MIT Media Lab,
-
where I'm part of a relatively new
and unique group called Design Fiction,
-
where we're wedged somewhere
between science fiction and science fact.
-
And at MIT, I am lucky enough
to rub shoulders with scientists
-
studying all kinds of cutting edge fields
-
like synthetic neurobiology,
-
artificial intelligence, artificial life
-
and everything in between.
-
And across campus,
there's truly brilliant scientists
-
asking questions like,
"How can I make the world a better place?"
-
And part of what my group
likes to ask is, "What is better?"
-
What is better for you, for me,
-
for a white woman, a gay man,
-
a veteran, a child with a prosthetic?
-
Technology is never neutral.
-
It frames a reality
-
and reflects a context.
-
Can you imagine what it would say
about the work-life balance at your office
-
if these were standard issue
on the first day?
-
(Laughter)
-
I believe it's the role
of artists and designers
-
to raise critical questions.
-
Art is how you can see
and feel the future,
-
and today is an exciting
time to be a designer,
-
for all the new tools becoming accessible.
-
For instance, synthetic biology
-
seeks to write biology
as a design problem.
-
And through these developments,
-
my lab asks, what are the roles
and responsibilities
-
of an artist, designer,
scientist or businessman?
-
What are the implications
-
of synthetic biology, genetic engineering,
-
and how are they shaping our notions
of what it means to be a human?
-
What are the implications of this
on society, on evolution
-
and what are the stakes in this game?
-
My own speculative design research
at the current moment
-
plays with synthetic biology,
-
but for more emotionally driven output.
-
I'm obsessed with olfaction
as a design space,
-
and this project started with this idea
-
of what if you could take
a smell selfie, a smelfie?
-
(Laughter)
-
What if you could take
your own natural body odor
-
and send it to a lover?
-
Funny enough, I found that this
was a 19th century Austrian tradition,
-
where couples in courtship
would keep a slice of apple
-
crammed under their armpit during dances,
-
and at the end of the evening,
-
the girl would give the guy
she most fancied her used fruit,
-
and if the feeling was mutual,
-
he would wolf down that stinky apple.
-
(Laughter)
-
Famously, Napoleon wrote
many love letters to Josephine,
-
but perhaps amongst the most memorable
is this brief and urgent note:
-
"Home in three days. Don't bathe."
-
(Laughter)
-
Both Napoleon and Josephine
adored violets.
-
Josephine wore violet-scented perfume,
-
carried violets on their wedding day,
-
and Napoleon sent her a bouquet of violets
-
every year on their anniversary.
-
When Josephine passed away,
-
he planted violets at her grave,
-
and just before his exile,
-
he went back to that tomb site,
-
picked some of those flowers,
entombed them in a locket
-
and wore them until the day he died.
-
And I found this so moving,
-
I thought, could I engineer that violet
to smell just like Josephine?
-
What if, for the rest of eternity,
-
when you went to visit her site,
-
you could smell Josephine
just as Napoleon loved her?
-
Could we engineer new ways of mourning,
-
new rituals for remembering?
-
After all, we've engineered
transgenic crops
-
to be maximized for profit,
-
crops that stand up to transport,
-
crops that have a long shelf life,
-
crops that taste sugary sweet
but resist pests,
-
sometimes at the expense
of nutritional value.
-
Can we harness these same technologies
for an emotionally sensitive output?
-
So currently in my lab,
-
I'm researching questions like,
what makes a human smell like a human?
-
And it turns out it's fairly complicated.
-
Factors such as your diet,
your medications, your lifestyle
-
all factor into the way you smell.
-
And I found that our sweat
is mostly odorless,
-
but it's our bacteria and microbiome
-
that's responsible for your smells,
your mood, your identity
-
and so much beyond.
-
And there's all kinds
of molecules that you emit
-
but which we only perceive subconsciously.
-
So I've been cataloging and collecting
-
bacteria from different sites of my body.
-
After talking to a scientist, we thought,
-
maybe the perfect concoction of Ani
-
is like 10 percent collarbone,
30 percent underarm,
-
40 percent bikini line and so forth,
-
and occasionally
I let researchers from other labs
-
take a sniff of my samples.
-
And it's been interesting to hear
how smell of the body
-
is perceived outside
of the context of the body.
-
I've gotten feedback such as,
-
smells like flowers, like chicken,
-
like cornflakes,
-
like beef carnitas.
-
(Laughter)
-
At the same time, I cultivate
a set of carnivorous plants
-
for their ability to emit
fleshlike odors to attract prey,
-
in an attempt to kind of create
this symbiotic relationship
-
between my bacteria and this organism.
-
And as it so happens,
I'm at MIT and I'm in a bar,
-
and I was talking to a scientist
-
who happens to be a chemist
and a plant scientist,
-
and I was telling him about my project,
-
and he was like, "Well, this sounds
like botany for lonely women."
-
(Laughter)
-
Unperturbed, I said, "OK."
-
I challenged him.
-
"Can we engineer a plant
that can love me back?"
-
And for some reason,
he was like, "Sure, why not?"
-
So we started with,
can we get a plant to grow towards me
-
like I was the sun?
-
And so we're looking at mechanisms
in plants such as phototropism,
-
which causes the plant
to grow towards the sun
-
by producing hormones like auxin,
-
which causes cell elongation
on the shady side.
-
And right now I'm creating
a set of lipsticks
-
that are infused with these chemicals
-
that allow me to interact with a plant
on its own chemical signatures --
-
lipsticks that cause plants
to grow where I kiss it,
-
plants that blossom
where I kiss the bloom.
-
And through these projects,
-
I'm asking questions like,
-
how do we define nature?
-
How do we define nature
when we can reengineer its properties,
-
and when should we do it?
-
Should we do it for profit, for utility?
-
Can we do it for emotional ends?
-
Can biotechnology be used
to create work as moving as music?
-
What are the thresholds between science
-
and its ability to shape
our emotional landscape?
-
It's a famous design mantra
that form follows function.
-
Well, now, wedged somewhere
between science, design and art
-
I get to ask,
-
what if fiction informs fact?
-
What kind of R&D lab would that look like
-
and what kind of questions
would we ask together?
-
We often look to technology as the answer,
-
but as an artist and designer,
-
I like to ask, but what is the question?
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)