KJ Wu aka Overgrown
Taiwan
FloridaRAMA Project
Ballet of the Final Anthozoans, mixed media: 3D printed and hand built ceramics, 3D printed bioplastic, acrylic, mylar, electronics
Ballet of the Final Anthozoans is an immersive installation created by “OVERGROWN” comprised of Adam Hutz, Barrak Darweesh, KJ Wu and Tina Piracci that choreographs the wondrous phenomenon of coral spawning. With the backbone of our ecosystem in decline with humans to blame, these Final Anthozoans find themselves flipped upside down in a world of imbalance. Due to global warming, pollution and other human-created catastrophes, coral spawning is becoming less and less successful, adding to the cumulative decline of our coral reefs. Ballet of the Final Anthozoans acts as both a tribute and a warning: we must protect these delicate environments, or else bear witness to their last dance. The egg within coral spawning alludes to cyclicality, a common theme in OVERGROWN’s work. Upon viewing, the participant is faced with an alluring space that plays with depth and perception to lend an expansive underwater atmosphere.
Signs of Life – Bloom, mixed media
For FloridaRAMA's experience, KJ created Signs of Life – Bloom a pneumatic light sculpture that speculates an exotic life from the nature of the future. What you see in the dome is collected through Core Sample, a portal that teleports future ecosystems to present. It is a species that emerged after the chaotic shifts in climate. During the process of photosynthesis, it actively breathes in a large amount of carbon dioxide using its bladder and converts it into an energy source, which causes the flower to glow in colors.
Bio—
Kuan-Ju Wu‘s work focuses on creating delightful interactions between humans, machines and environments. He builds immersive experiences and tangible interfaces that borrow facets from the shapes and movements of nature, the stories about the future machines and the perceptual memories from our early childhood; those intuitive, rich and satisfying experiences. He has shown work in such venues as Ars Electronica, Japan Media Art Festival and CURRENTS New Media Art Festival.