Setting up LIVING MIRROR at Natlab

2014

In March 2014, Living Mirror travelled to NatLab in Eindhoven. Over two days the installation was assembled on site — an interactive bio-display in which billions of magnetotactic bacteria orient to a shifting magnetic field, turning a living culture into a responsive surface. What follows are notes from the build: the patient, unglamorous work of coaxing a living medium into the gallery.

Arrival

NatLab, Eindhoven

The first crates are opened on the morning of the 26th. Before Living Mirror can respond to anyone, every part — vessels, optics, magnetic coils and control electronics — has to find its place in an unfamiliar room.

First Light

Bringing the display up

By the afternoon the display is powered for the first time on site. Calibration is slow: the bacteria are alive, and the image they form depends on temperature, density and the steady pull of the field.

Into Position

Assembling the mirror

Day two is spent setting the piece into its final position — aligning the optics and the magnetics so that the swarm reads cleanly as a single, shifting surface for visitors to stand before.

Ready

A living surface

With the last adjustments made, Living Mirror holds steady — some eight billion organisms moving in concert, a reflection drawn not in glass but in life, waiting for the room to fill.