Chloe Fitzpatrick

Jewellery & Metal Design BDes (Hons)

Jewellery and BioDesigner collaborating with microorganisms.

About

Chloe Fitzpatrick

Chloe Fitzpatrick is a jewellery designer and biodesigner, who collaborates with microorganisms in her work.

For this project she worked with scientists from the University of Dundee and James Hutton Institute, to help grow colour from bacteria found in plants and her body. She also worked towards preserving these colours and colonies in UV resin and dying thread with these pigments.

First, she swabbed parts of her body and plants on LBS nutrient agar, grew a range of bacterial colonies, then selected the coloured colonies she liked and 'isolated' them on a new agar plate, to multiply the colour fast.

Once the coloured colonies grew, UV resin was poured onto the plates, mixed and set into a rubber mould then sealed with gloss.

Her goal for this project is to help people acknowledge the hidden world of bacteria that surrounds us day-to-day and to reconnect with a part of nature that is not commonly thought of.

She believes bacteria has great potential of becoming an environmentally friendly alternative to heavy chemical-based dyes and pigments, this is something she is excited about exploring in future projects.

Hand pressed into nutrient agar. Thread dyed with bacteria, with resin creatures dyed by yellow human bacteria
Chloes feet bacteria grown around sterling silver.
Chloes foot beside her feet bacteria
Chloes palm and and finger bacteria, with silver
Chloes face imprinted into nutrient agar. Face bacteria.
Outdoor plant leaf bacteria, imprinted into nutrient agar.
Plant stem and jewellery in silver
Plant leaf bacteria, surrounded by a silver ring

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