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Information Experience Design (MA)

Shi Cao

Shi Cao is a visual artist with an undergraduate degree in Visual Communication Design from Jiangnan University and is currently studying for an MA in Information Experience Design at the Royal College of Art. He has a background in interdisciplinary practice, specialising in illustration, digital modelling, installation art, photography and the production of moving experimental images.

Plants sustain life on Earth. They are sensitive, complex and interconnected creatures that play an amazingly active role in ecosystems and human society. He is fascinated by the emotions of plants and the relationship between humans. Still, as anthropocentrism has led to increased tensions between humans and nature, Shi plans to ease the tensions between humans and the natural world through the concept of the symbiotic world. Using 'plant love' as a starting point, he aims to explore ways to strengthen the connection between people, plants and pollinators through immersive experiences and to disrupt the definition of anthropocentrism by enhancing human comprehension of the ways in which information is transmitted between plants.


Model wearing a transparent jacket filled with flowers

As the exchange of information between plants and their reproduction is always silent and not easily observed by humans, whispers between plants are happening all around us all the time. A small percentage of plants are pollinated by wind, but most plants communicate through pollinators, which therefore play a vital role in plant communication.

Over seventy-five per cent of crops depend on pollination and, according to Buglife, insects have declined by 60% in the UK in the last 20 years, further evidence that insects are at risk around the world.

It was a pollinator rescue plan, I provided a moving resting place for pollinators in the city, I designed a coat to carry a lot of flowers and I wore it to walk through the crowds, in the streets and in the stations. I tried to get the attention of pedestrians through this parade about love.

Plant's homeIn the wake of the climate crisis, people are trying to survive by designing wearable devices that can be carried around with plants, which can provide the oxygen people need every day, as well as food and a place to rest for pollinators in cities, who hope to survive the climate crisis by making the devices widely available. The film documents how the device is used and allows viewers to reflect on where pollinators and plants are at home.
Installation hanging from a tree
Wearing a device in the forest
In the underground station
Exit the underground
Walking in the streets
Coats are put in the wardrobe
Installation hanging from a tree
clothes
Experiment
clothes
clothes
clothes

Medium:

Installation art, Documentary, Performance art

Size:

00:05:35

Description

I chose to co-create the world with the audience by inviting them to draw their own imaginary flowers and I created their digital gardens for the pollinators by collecting data, aiming to indirectly influence people's ideologies through collaboration, providing new understanding and practical experiences for the pollinators. The choice of co-creating worlds increases the emotional engagement of the participants, increases interactivity and participation, participants are more likely to become emotionally invested and the open nature of co-creating worlds allows participants the freedom to be creative and innovative, making the digital garden more random. The collaborative and nurturing approach to digital gardens increases participants' interest in gardening and fosters a sense of sustainability.

3D flower

Medium:

Virtual reality, UE5, 3D scanning, 3D modeling

Size:

00:01:00
Flowers and letters
letters
letters
touch the letter
pollen on the finger
As the viewer reads the love letter and interacts with the letter, the pollen stays on the viewer's hand. Reading the love letter allows for an immersive experience of the abstract feelings between the plant and the pollinator.
collect pollen
collect sound
Collecting the sounds made by pollinators interacting with flowers during plant pollination
Audio visualisation
Visualising the audio during pollination
A microscopic view of plant-insect communication from the pollinator's perspective and interactive experimental images based on the audio of pollination.

Description

Plants have a complex relationship with pollinating insects, interacting with them by means of their morphology, odour and pheromones. Pollen is the central vehicle for their communication, and pollen itself carries a great deal of genetic information, so it is chosen as the main object of the experiment. Through sound visualisation, the sounds produced by the pollinators and the plants are visualised, with the audience following the audio rhythm and touching the love letter to immerse themselves in the connection between the plants and the pollinating insects. The audience will be intrigued by the connection between plants and pollinators and will think about it.

Medium:

Paper,Pollen,Audio visualisation,Documentary

Size:

18cm*13cm
dishes
dishes
dishes
dishes
Instructions
Experiment
Test the germination rate of biological material by burying it in soil

Description

Pollinators are facing a serious crisis in the UK, with the global loss of pollinating insects leading to insufficient pollination and reduced crop yields, resulting in the premature death of around 500,000 people each year. The importance of food to humans is clear. By combining the seeds produced by pollinating plants with food design, the seeds of pollinating insects' favourite plants are selected and the audience is invited to make and enjoy them together to reflect on the impact of pollinators and plants on our daily lives. Audiences will touch, smell and taste the 'food' and at the end of the exhibition will be invited to take it home and plant it, thus helping pollinators in a practical way.


Medium:

Agar, pollen, seeds, glycerine
A lot of photography
In 2070, plants are forced to evolve as a result of a massive reduction in pollinators and the continued deterioration of the environment. Due to the loss of pollination services from pollinators, future plants adapt to the changes in their environment by changing their morphology in order to reproduce. The morphology of the future plant was generated by training AI and recorded using film. And the evolutionary history of plants is recorded in archival form.

Medium:

Film, AI, Photography

Size:

1m*2m