The Taichung Fiber Arts Museum invited Malaysian-Chinese architect Wen-Ting Chang to create the installation art piece, "Another Way of Collecting: Waste Regeneration, Refined Use, and Allowing Disappearance," using "bio-leather"—a material derived from the fermentation of pineapple pulp and microbial film—as its medium. During the exhibition, the artwork changes with temperature and humidity, allowing viewers to experience the life cycle of org…
This story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.
The Taichung Fiber Arts Museum invited Malaysian-Chinese architect Wen-Ting Chang to create the installation art piece, "Another Way of Collecting: Waste Regeneration, Refined Use, and Allowing Disappearance," using "bio-leather"—a material derived from the fermentation of pineapple pulp and microbial film—as its medium. During the exhibition, the artwork changes with temperature and humidity, allowing viewers to experience the life cycle of org…