Project Lead

Minami Kotani
This workshop explores future forms of cohabitation between humans and other species through trans-species theory, bioArt, and direct experimentation with slime molds. Inspired by Hanna Saito and Sulamith Tamborriello’s Systems of Care in Slime Mould Structures, it approaches the slime mold as collaborator rather than specimen, an organism that blurs boundaries between individual and collective, teaching us about decentralized intelligence and adaptive connection.
Participants are encouraged to examine how care functions as a method and ethical stance: a way to organize resistance, share responsibility, and imagine new ecologies of living-together. The workshop’s theoretical input introduces concepts from trans-species thinking and bioArt alongside the biology of slime molds, revealing how non-human systems can reframe ideas of agency and learning.
Through guided experiments and observation, participants will work hands-on with slime molds to trace growth patterns, responsiveness, and environmental interaction. This practice becomes both scientific and poetic, an embodied reflection on reciprocity and interdependence. Ultimately, the workshop aims to foster awareness of the power dynamics within cohabitation and to cultivate trans-species sensitivity: a mindset that sees life as mutually shaped, connected, and sustained through acts of attentive care.
This event forms part of the Planetary Embassy in Japan. At the venue, the exhibition Imagining Planetary Diplomacy, featuring selected youth projects from around the world, will be on view. Together, the workshop and exhibition invite visitors to imagine new forms of planetary diplomacy.
Bio
Sulamith Tamborriello’s artistic practice revolves around intersections where ecological
crisis, climate justice, and political participation meet. Working with transdisciplinary research and collective action, she creates demonstrations, participatory exhibitions, that often give rise to artistic objects serving as catalysts for further dialogue. Her work seeks to connect human and non-human forms of life through living processes of care. She currently lives, studies, and works in Zurich.
Bio
Contemporary artist, born in 1988. After graduating from the Glass Course in Crafts at Tama Art University, she joined the biological art platform metaPhorest and began working with living materials.
Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Information Sciences and Arts at Toyo University since 2025, and doctoral candidate at The University of Tokyo (Kakehi Lab).
She collaborates with true slime moulds as nonhuman agents, exploring creativity as an emergent process across interacting systems.
How can diplomacy, research, and cultural practice respond to environmental challenges that extend beyond human-centered frameworks? While presenting the exhibition projects, speakers from the fields of art, science, philosophy, and curatorial practice will explore how planetary dialogue can open new ways of listening, cooperation, and shared responsibility.
What if diplomacy listened to the Earth as well as to humans? Emerging from an international open call that invited young researchers, innovators, and artists from across the world, this exhibition presents visions of planetary diplomacy as a practice of care, attentive listening, and shared responsibility for life on Earth.
What might care look like beyond the human? In this hands-on workshop, participants work directly with slime molds to explore collaboration and cohabitation across species boundaries. Moving between theory and practice, the session combines trans-species thinking, bioArt, and slime mold biology with guided experimentation.
What does coexistence with the more-than-human require of us today? How can science, storytelling, and collective knowledge, help restore balance between humans and the living world? This event brings together film and dialogue to explore biodiversity, and our shared responsibility toward the planet’s living fabric.
How can energy innovation respond responsibly to complex, interconnected global challenges? This event invites participants to explore how humans, technologies, and ecosystems can act together to address shared planetary challenges.
What does it mean to enter into dialogue with the Earth? And how might young people contribute to a more just climate future? Join us to explore how youth engagement can foster climate futures grounded in care and coexistence.
Project Lead
Minami Kotani
Media Contact
Alice Rouaud









