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“Her works often invoke beauty and sublimity, whether of flowering plants or birdsong—aesthetic categories that foreground our inevitably human perspective on the natural world and what will be lost if the trajectory of the climate crisis is not reversed.”
“Collaborating with horticulturalists and scientists, the artist devised an algorithm to create garden planting schemes that support the maximum number of bees, butterflies and other pollinators for every square foot.”
"We must learn anew! Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg raises some such fundamental questions in her living artwork – an inter-species garden within Kensington Gardens at the Serpentine Galleries in London.“
"Ginsberg's creation is not another rewilding project, but something much more deliberate. The design of Pollinator Pathmaker gardens has been put in the many 'hands' - arms, legs, and mandibles - of the creatures it aims to attract.“
The Hardy Plant: Journal of the Hardy Plant Society
"This new wave of innovations could help us understand that our gardens — and technology — can be designed for the benefit of other creatures beyond ourselves.“
"Ginsberg sees Pollinator Pathmaker as encoding empathy into an algorithm, in this case by defining empathy as a design that would support as many pollinator species as possible.“
"Have you ever wondered how bees see the natural world? Artist-turned-entomologist and gardener Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg has created an algorithm to optimise planting from a bee’s perspective.“
"A garden is typically a space in which nature is sculpted to suit human aesthetic tastes, but could the typology be reframed to meet the needs of other species and might our urge to “better” the world be extended to account for ideas other than its utility to humans?“
"Designing the natural world can be an uneasy undertaking. Instinctively, something feels unheimlich, even ethically dubious, about engineering what is natural. But Ginsberg’s works taken as a whole show a confidence that posing questions around this unease is just as valuable an undertaking as proposing solutions to them.“
"Ginsberg’s 55-metre long piece, which is taking shape at the eco-visitor attraction the Eden Project in Cornwall, is not designed, like most art, to please humans, but rather to appeal to bees, butterflies, moths, wasps and other endangered pollinators.“
"Artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg has created software for bugs and put a algorithm in charge of a garden created solely for the pleasure of pollinators.“
"Artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg has created Pollinator Pathmaker, which uses an algorithm to optimise the selection and placement of plants for polliantors - what she calls an 'artwork for pollinators, not about them.“