WEBVTT 00:00:04.669 --> 00:00:07.906 How many of you have heard of Amphitrite, goddess of the sea? 00:00:07.906 --> 00:00:10.675 Have you heard of Poseidon, my husband? (Laughter) 00:00:10.675 --> 00:00:12.415 He gets around – 00:00:12.415 --> 00:00:14.845 I didn't want to marry him but he kept sending his dolphins after me, 00:00:14.845 --> 00:00:16.653 and finally, I said, "Fine, I'll marry you, 00:00:16.653 --> 00:00:19.991 on the condition that we clean up our house, it's a mess!" 00:00:19.991 --> 00:00:23.591 All the rubble from dynamite fishing and deep sea trawling, 00:00:23.591 --> 00:00:27.796 corals bleaching from climate change, pollution, disease. 00:00:27.796 --> 00:00:31.387 Corals are not only majestically beautiful but incredibly functional, 00:00:31.387 --> 00:00:34.837 providing habitat for more than 25% of marine species 00:00:34.837 --> 00:00:38.292 and protecting shores from erosion. 00:00:38.292 --> 00:00:40.740 By running low volt direct current through sea water, 00:00:40.740 --> 00:00:43.277 limestone minerals deposit on a metal. 00:00:43.277 --> 00:00:45.511 And the resulting surface is a natural substrate 00:00:45.511 --> 00:00:48.249 for corals to settle upon and colonize. 00:00:48.249 --> 00:00:53.053 Architect professor Wolf Hilbertz invented Biorock as a building material, 00:00:53.053 --> 00:00:57.195 and he teamed up with Dr. Tom Goreau, President of the Global Coral Reef Alliance, 00:00:57.195 --> 00:00:58.992 to develop coral restoration 00:00:58.992 --> 00:01:02.358 and sustainable fishing practices in aquaculture. 00:01:04.398 --> 00:01:07.566 In 2003, I'm sitting in the audience of a sustainable architecture conference 00:01:07.566 --> 00:01:09.460 and I saw this – 00:01:11.740 --> 00:01:14.479 Oh my God, I was so moved, I had an epiphany. 00:01:14.479 --> 00:01:16.843 I looked down, I was wearing my two ocean rings 00:01:16.843 --> 00:01:18.942 – one with cast barnacles and fish, 00:01:18.942 --> 00:01:22.280 the other has ceramic bits I found in Glass Beach. 00:01:22.280 --> 00:01:24.142 I realized that everything I was doing at the time 00:01:24.142 --> 00:01:27.318 was somehow a reflection of the Biorock process. 00:01:27.318 --> 00:01:29.651 I was spinning dog, cat and human hair into yarn 00:01:29.651 --> 00:01:31.958 and accreting it onto chicken wire forms 00:01:31.958 --> 00:01:35.505 for this installation about human relationships with natural resources. 00:01:35.505 --> 00:01:39.033 This is an electroformed copper cauliflower, 00:01:39.033 --> 00:01:43.860 electroformed copper seedpods and hammered raised copper vessel, 00:01:43.860 --> 00:01:46.886 these are cast silver dogwood blossoms. 00:01:46.886 --> 00:01:48.681 I was freezing nature into metal, 00:01:48.681 --> 00:01:51.348 and now I saw I could use metal to grow life. 00:01:51.348 --> 00:01:53.780 This is thousands of kids weaving fabric, 00:01:53.780 --> 00:01:57.616 basically hiding the weaving wall sculpture I made beneath. 00:01:57.616 --> 00:01:59.550 The Randall Museum asked me to make a replica 00:01:59.550 --> 00:02:01.485 of this Beniamino Bufano Cat, 00:02:01.485 --> 00:02:05.126 so kids could weave wire to flush out its form like these previous pieces. 00:02:05.126 --> 00:02:07.626 So, I had to do this – I learned to scuba, 00:02:07.626 --> 00:02:10.358 I went to Pemuteran, Bali – home of Karang Lestari, NOTE Paragraph 00:02:10.358 --> 00:02:12.359 it's the largest coral nursery in the world. 00:02:12.359 --> 00:02:18.039 And I took a Biorock workshop with Wolf Hilbertz and Tom Goreau. 00:02:18.039 --> 00:02:19.827 This a model – 00:02:19.827 --> 00:02:22.405 this is one of the sculptures – 00:02:22.405 --> 00:02:24.211 we did a lot of welding at night when it was cooler, 00:02:24.211 --> 00:02:28.428 and by day we would attach coral fragments with wires and pliers. 00:02:28.428 --> 00:02:30.950 Here is a progression of Liku Liku. 00:02:30.950 --> 00:02:34.159 The electrolysis creates an alkaline buffer zone around the structure, 00:02:34.159 --> 00:02:37.188 so corals can grow 2-6 times faster, 00:02:37.188 --> 00:02:39.565 less energy goes to the skeleton production, 00:02:39.565 --> 00:02:43.187 and they can withstand increased temperatures that normally kill them. 00:02:43.187 --> 00:02:46.602 After 6 years, I returned and Liku Liku is overgrown. 00:02:46.602 --> 00:02:48.364 The sculptures can be any size or shape, 00:02:48.364 --> 00:02:51.474 from this small coral skirt to this large dome, 00:02:51.474 --> 00:02:53.370 to reefs miles long. 00:02:53.370 --> 00:02:56.353 If we can build the super highway, why not a super reef. 00:02:56.353 --> 00:02:58.911 The process can be applied to – 00:02:58.911 --> 00:03:01.689 or it's actually very beneficial to oysters, mussels, sea-grasses – 00:03:01.689 --> 00:03:04.354 and it can be applied to artistic boat moorings 00:03:04.354 --> 00:03:06.392 and living ocean mausoleums, 00:03:06.392 --> 00:03:10.194 that attract fish, snorkelers and photographers. 00:03:10.194 --> 00:03:12.727 This past summer, I worked with an amazing team 00:03:12.727 --> 00:03:14.967 to make a sculpture for MUSA, the underwater museum 00:03:14.967 --> 00:03:17.633 in the National Marine Park in Cancún. 00:03:17.633 --> 00:03:20.517 And this is the work of Jason deCaires Taylor, NOTE Paragraph 00:03:20.517 --> 00:03:22.686 he's the director and curator. 00:03:22.686 --> 00:03:24.305 Here are some of the designs I submitted – 00:03:24.305 --> 00:03:30.443 I was trying to incorporate some castings with metal and – 00:03:30.443 --> 00:03:32.376 we landed on DNA – 00:03:32.376 --> 00:03:35.544 While working on the model 00:03:35.544 --> 00:03:39.284 I was contemplating content, composition and function, 00:03:39.284 --> 00:03:42.769 and I was also thinking of how humans and corals 00:03:42.769 --> 00:03:46.251 actually share very similar immunity genetics. 00:03:46.251 --> 00:03:48.664 So depending on your interpretation, 00:03:48.664 --> 00:03:51.902 the helices can be dividing or coming together. 00:03:51.902 --> 00:03:56.371 The sculpture's in Mexico now awaiting some final paperwork and funds, 00:03:56.371 --> 00:03:58.930 so that we can return as soon as possible, 00:03:58.930 --> 00:04:03.145 and put it out there and plant it with coral. 00:04:03.145 --> 00:04:07.034 In the meantime, I'm working with Woody Wood at Sea Horse Aquarium & Supply in Portland. 00:04:07.034 --> 00:04:10.529 We're doing some experiments in closed systems, 00:04:10.529 --> 00:04:12.690 and through my artistic lens, I'm learning a lot 00:04:12.690 --> 00:04:16.005 about coral biology, electrolysis and chemistry 00:04:16.005 --> 00:04:19.553 in a very tactile, intimate way. 00:04:19.553 --> 00:04:23.227 We need creativity, calcium and courage to revive corals, 00:04:23.227 --> 00:04:25.734 and to prevent them from bleaching and dying. 00:04:25.734 --> 00:04:29.133 And when you imagine life support in the ocean, 00:04:29.133 --> 00:04:31.807 it doesn't have to be industrial and sterile. 00:04:31.807 --> 00:04:35.707 It can be provocative, experimental and inviting, 00:04:35.707 --> 00:04:38.460 and if the corals collaborate and play their part, 00:04:38.460 --> 00:04:40.414 almost invisible. 00:04:40.414 --> 00:04:44.708 (Applause)