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Zeke after letting Vika take an electric razor to his face! Wow, the friendship between those 2 is special.
The Diplomatic Conference on Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge took place in Geneva, Switzerland, from May 13-24, 2024.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The Rice Value Chain Compact of the African Development Bank (AfDB)-funded “Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT)” initiative was officially launched, 6-7 September 2018, at the AfricaRice Research Station in M’bé near Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire. The TAAT Rice Value Chain Compact will contribute to the AfDB ‘Feed Africa’ initiative through enhanced deployment of impactful technologies, innovations and products in the rice value chain.
Partners along the rice value chain from 10 African countries attended the project launch to discuss the implementation plan at country level, the technologies that will be deployed and the approaches and strategies for scaling up the technologies. Implementation will start in Benin, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Madagascar, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Uganda, with spill-over in Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea in the first year.
As part of the program, the participants had a guided tour of AfricaRice demonstration plots, seed multiplication, the postharvest and processing facility and the Genetic Resources Unit. The visit allowed them to see some of the technologies that have been selected for scaling up through the TAAT Rice Compact.
Photo : R.Raman, AfricaRice
Copenhagen, Denmark - September, 24th, 2015. Genetically Modified Paradise by night - sculpture group created by Danish professor Bjorn Norgaard. Postmodern statues and modern houses reflected on the water.
Photos from our trip though a greenhouse for doing SCIENCE!
Blog: www.whatisthescience.com/exploring-science/scientific-gar...
Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.
On the first day you can see The Virus & Comb Jellies by Genetic Moo, Chromatic Play sculptures by Tine Bech and Primordial sound and generative visuals by Jockel Liess.
Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.
For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com
Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.
Day 10 at Microworld Arcadia we put on a display of Genetic Moo's interactive art from the last 5 years including some early works: Animacules and Mother. Most popular was The Virus which we first showed two years ago at Glastonbury - some children spent maybe 15 minutes testng the work to its limits with series of drop kicks and spinning smashes. Later on some Tango dancers came and twirled through the space.
Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.
For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com
This is a genetically modified ear of corn. When you touch her she speaks with apocalyptic urgency, fearful of her inability to reproduce as the end of her life nears.
NOVA GENETIC team visits IITA to collaborate on genetics hosted by IITA management represented by Deputy Director General, Partnerships for Delivery, DDG P4D, Kenton Dashiell, and Bioscience Center, facilitated by IITA scientists, Ismail Rabbi, Ryo Matsumoto, Abush Abebe, and Lab Manager, Yemi Fajire on 19 January 2023. Photo by IITA.
Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.
On the first day you can see The Virus & Comb Jellies by Genetic Moo, Chromatic Play sculptures by Tine Bech and Primordial sound and generative visuals by Jockel Liess.
Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.
For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com
Snapshot taken during the Diplomatic Conference on Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge which took place in Geneva, Switzerland from May 13-24, 2024.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Microworld Arcadia was a group art show organised by Genetic Moo at the Arcadecardiff gallery in the Queens Arcade shopping mall for two weeks in May 2013. The show consisted of interactive and generative artworks by different artists. The art works responded to the audience, the gallery and importantly to each other, so the space was constantly changing in pixels, sound, colour and motion. Each day different works were brought together in different combinations.
Day 10 at Microworld Arcadia we put on a display of Genetic Moo's interactive art from the last 5 years including some early works: Animacules and Mother. Most popular was The Virus which we first showed two years ago at Glastonbury - some children spent maybe 15 minutes testng the work to its limits with series of drop kicks and spinning smashes. Later on some Tango dancers came and twirled through the space.
Microworld Arcadia was a big success breaking attendance records for the gallery and we plan to take the show on tour in the future, working with different sets of local artists each time to create interactive digital Microworlds around the UK and beyond.
For more information about the show see www.geneticmoo.com
Genetically engineered of course......Only because Frogs with Glow-in-the-Dark eyes make life better for everyone.......