Infinite Transformations in a Suitcase: A Bioart Homage to Cultural Resilience
Hamidi, F., Dusman, L., & Boot, L.
Understanding and engaging with cultural practices that respond to change and resist oppression are increasingly relevant to critical design in and beyond HCI. While these areas of exploration are no stranger to the practices of bioart and biodesign that draw on the cultural, aesthetic, and practical affordances of living organisms to engage audiences and users in reflection and cultural production, they are less familiar in HCI and computing. In recent years, increased access to low-cost synthetic biology tools and techniques has made it easier for non-experts, including those trained in computing but not biology, to experiment with modifying living organisms for creative and artistic purposes, including at the molecular DNA level. Infinite Transformations in a Suitcase is a multimedia installation that uses bioart, visual art, and music strategies to create a meditative space inviting reflection on the resilience of culture. At its center is a glass of poetry-infused wine created using genetically modified yeast cells whose DNA contains an encoded 14th-century Sufi poem by Hafiz of Shiraz, surrounded by video of it being written in Farsi calligraphy. By combining multiple embodied and abstract poetic elements, the installation invites the audience to reflect on the materiality and movement of culture.
COMPASS ’25
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[ACM]
Infinite Transformations in a Suitcase: Encountering Human-DNA Interaction through Poetry-infused Wine
Hamidi, F., Dusman, L., & Boot, L.
Interacting with materials, including biological and living materials, that embody computation and information has increasingly been of interest to the TEI community. In recent years, increased access to low-cost synthetic biology tools and techniques has made it easier for non-experts to experiment with modifying living organisms for creative and artistic purposes, including at the molecular DNA level. A challenge has been to create engaging and culturally-mediated experiences to make these human-DNA interactions accessible to diverse audiences. Infinite Transformations in a Suitcase is a multimedia installation that creates a mediative space inviting reflection on the resilience of culture. At its center is a glass of poetry-infused wine created using genetically modified yeast cells whose DNA contains an encoded 14th-century Sufi poem by Hafiz of Shiraz, surrounded by video of it being written in Farsi calligraphy. By combining multiple embodied and abstract poetic elements, the installation invites the audience to reflect on the materiality and movement of culture.
TEI '25
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Our Publications
Manuscript Under Review
Singh, A., Walker, J., Scheifele, L., Hamidi, F., Swann, A., Scholze, A., Takara, C., Guzman, K. D. R., Banerjee, A., & Stamato, L. (in press). Engineering biotechnology for K–12 learning: A synthesis review of the biodesign in education literature. In 2026 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE).
Stamato, L., Scheifele, L., Walker, J., & Hamidi, F. (under review). “The Community Lab is Whomever Walks in that Door:” Examining a (Counter-)Hegemonic Human-Knowledge Interface. Submitted to Proceedings of the International Conference on Tangible, Embedded, and Embodied Interaction (TEI ’26).
Invited Panel
Hamidi, F., & Scheifele, L. (2025, May 10). The Broader Community Impact of NSF Grants. Invited presentation at NSF STEM Day Panel, Baltimore, MD.