aRC(2)himera

aRC(2)himera
Bartlett UCL London, MArch Graduate Architectural Design (GAD), research cluster 2 (RC2)

Advisor: Univ.-Prof.(IBK) Marjan Colletti PhD, Guan Lee, Tea Lim, Pavlos Fereos.

In Greek mythology the Chimera was a monstrous fire-breathing creature. She had the body of a lioness, a tail ending in a snake’s head, and a goat’s head arising on her back at the centre of her spine. There are of course many other examples in different cultures that could also be referred to as Chimeras. In genetics, biology and botany a Chimera represents an animal or plant with genetically distinct cells from two different zygotes or genetically different types of tissue; the resulting organism is a mixture of tissues, and of different sets of chromosomes. In paleontology, it is a fossil reconstructed with parts from different animals.

Exhibited at the Haus der Architektur, Graz.
Image credit: thomasraggam.com
 




                                                                     Photos by Sahar Navabakhsh