- Artist/s
- Peter Weibel
- Title
- Ein bioenergetisches Paradoxon
- Year
- 1975
- Medium / Material / Technic
- photo-documentation of the installation with living blue-green algae at the exhibition On the Cosmology of the Paradox (l) at the Galerie nächst St. Stefan, Vienna (reproduction)
The first known life forms on Earth were probably bacteria. Blue-green algae, cyanobacteria, a specific group of phototrophic bacteria that are the only prokaryotes able to produce oxygen, began to convert the early Earth’s atmosphere, which lacked free oxygen, into an oxygen-rich atmosphere about 3.2 billion years ago – through their ability to split free molecular oxygen from water under the action of sunlight through photosynthesis. In the installation with living blue-green algae »Ein bioenergetisches Paradoxon« [A Bioenergetic Paradox] Peter Weibel presented a paradoxical bioenergetic situation in the context of his exhibition »Zur Kosmologie des Paradoxen« (I) [On the Cosmology of the Paradox (I)] at the Galerie nächst St. Stefan in Vienna. Blue-green algae normally live in the oceans, in an open system. In an aquarium, however, they live in a closed system in which the positive effect of light is reversed by self-shading. The more light, the greater the growth of the algae and the more self-shading occurs. Algal growth is curtailed by too much shadow. The energy source of light, which makes life possible, ultimately leads to its extinction in a closed system.