Miriam Josi and Stella Lee Prowse (Aléa) (FR)
Mycelium – Nothing really matters
July 23rd – July 29th 2023
The Workshop
Mycelium, the filamentous structure of fungi, digests dead organic matter into soil and regenerates life. It is earth's decomposer and a great reminder that everything is transient and nothing is meant to last.
While many designers take longevity and durability as indicators of sustainability, we are asking: what materiality would look like if we accepted and reconciled with our own impermanence?
When working with mycelium, our aim is to assist in its whole life cycle while engaging at different stages of growth and decay. In our workshop, we’ll thus embrace the temporalities of mycelium and uncover opportunities for ephemeral designs.
Participants will practice Aléa’s unique method of bypassing the typical sterile conditions by growing objects in the soil. We’ll work together towards a collective piece on the Domaine’s site - grown, harvested and installed for a shared experience by the end of the week.
At the same time, our workshop kicks off an experimental laboratory that explores reciprocal bio-fabrication in a long term collaboration between Aléa and Domaine de Boisbuchet.
Workshop Categories
Aléa is an experimental design and material research studio based in Paris. Miriam Josi (CH) and Stella Lee Prowse (AU) co-created Aléa in 2021 after completing a Master of Science in Nature Inspired Design at ENSCI – Les Ateliers (École nationale supérieure de création industrielle, Paris).
Their work explores growth, decay and waste, with the goal to develop regenerative methods of fabrication while honoring beauty in the process. Situated at the intersections of design, biology, and agriculture, Aléa’s practice blurs the boundaries between disciplines.
Their ongoing research project ‘Back to Dirt’ explores a unique bio-inclusive myco-fabrication process that utilizes mycelium, the root system of fungi, and local waste substrates to grow objects in soil. Winning the 2021 Boisbuchet Residency Award allowed them to test their process at full scale, where they grew the first underground myco-fabricated chair. Their process bypasses the need for sterilization and plastic moulds, examining the potential of mycelia’s regenerative capacities. Their research is supported by FAIRE Paris and has been exhibited at Pavillon d’Arsenal, France Design Week, FRAC Orleans, Biennale Amour Vivant, among others.
Aléa’s mission is to establish a deeper relationship between the natural and built environment by designing autonomous place-based systems for a post-fossil fuel future. Their aim is to take a critical approach to biodesign to avoid a trajectory of exploitation and control of nature and to instead imagine new ways of making that interact and share control and benefits with the other-than-human.
www.aleawork.com
Housing
Accommodation & food are included
We can accommodate for special catering
All participants sleep in dormitories
To book a private room or bring additional guests, get in touch: workshops@boisbuchet.org
Education
Our staff are available to help you conceptualize & produce your designs
Tools & materials are provided by Boisbuchet
All workshops are taught in English
The number of participants is limited to 22
Activities
Weekly campfire, exhibition & guided tour of the Domaine
Conferences from designers throughout the week
The famous Wednesday Porky’s party