It's probably not something you think about a lot, but we all leave
pieces of ourselves everywhere we go. Flakes of skin here, a renegade
hair there, the occasional loogie, they all leave some of your DNA
behind. And while it normally goes untouched, someone could use it to
say.
As part of her project Stranger Visions,
Brooklyn-based artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg has been doing just that,
using a cigarette butt, a wad of gum, and some hair that she found
hanging around on the street. Using the DNA from the three samples, some
software she wrote herself, and a 3D-printer, she's been able to create
theoretical faces that belong to that cast-off genetic material.
Before you get too weirded out, it's important to note that these aren't the faces of those people, just possible faces based on gender, eye-color, and, maternal ethnicity, far from all the variables involved. There's a whole lot more subjectivity than we're kind of lead to believe."
And even if
the results of this little experiment aren't particularly accurate or
particularly useful, it does make you think twice about the trail of
genetic information you're leaving behind you, and what people might be
able to do with it, someday. Maybe you'll think twice about spitting on
the street next time.
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