The film brings together a wide range of stakeholders including, HSH Prince Albert II of Monaco, school children, a Plymouth fishmonger, a UK government Chief Scientific Adviser
Here's a powerful provocation from artist Jae Rhim Lee. Can we commit
our bodies to a cleaner, greener Earth, even after death? Naturally --
using a special burial suit seeded with pollution-gobbling mushrooms.
Jae Rhim Lee is a visual artist and mushroom lover. In her early work,
as a grad student at MIT, she built systems that reworked basic human
processes: sleeping (check out her it-just-might-work vertical bed from
2004), urinating and eating (and the relationship between the two). Now
she's working on a compelling new plan for the final human process:
decomposition.
Her Infinity Burial Project explores the choices
we face after death, and how our choices reflect our denial or
acceptance of death’s physical implications. She's been developing a new
strain of fungus, the Infinity Mushroom, that feeds on and remediates
the industrial toxins we store in our bodies and convert our unused
bodies efficiently into nutrients. Her Infinity Burial System converts
corpses into clean compost. She was in residence at the MAK Center in
Los Angeles this fall working on the project. And if this vision of life
after death appeals to you, sign up to become a Decompinaut yourself.
The film brings together a wide range of stakeholders including, HSH Prince Albert II of Monaco, school children, a Plymouth fishmonger, a UK government Chief Scientific Adviser