
Feeling Mold Yet?
Designer
Moist Moon
Country
Italy
category
Objects & Items
Prize
Official Selection 2025
Short Description
The organic clock is a timekeeping object that replaces mechanical measurement of time with living growth as the timekeeping mechanism. Instead of counting seconds, it allows time to manifest physically through the development of living organisms. While it adopts the familiar form of a clock, it removes all elements associated with accuracy: no hands, no numbers, no ticking mechanism. In their place, a semi-transparent enclosure containing an agar-based medium becomes a living habitat for mold, lychens and mycelia.
The clock’s pace is not fixed: temperature, humidity, air quality, and human presence influence the speed and character of growth. Denser, settled areas mark older times, while active edges indicate the present, linking both in a continuous process. In this way the clock doesn’t measure time in a universal way, but is inextricably linked to its surroundings. Time is irreversible, therefore the clock cannot be reset, and once the surface is fully transformed it is replaced, leaving behind a physical archive of elapsed time.
By presenting time as an animate process, the organic clock challenges the notion of time as precise and controllable, reframing it as material, uneven, and inseparable from its environment.
Process
The idea came to me when I found a molding beetroot in my fridge. It was beautiful! I thought about how delicate and soft mold looks and wondered whether I could integrate it in my artistic process. I’m fascinated by how mold seems to originate from nowhere and you can tell how old something is just by judging on the mold on it. So I took a photo of the rotten beetroot and used it in a moodboard to help me direct the aesthetics of the organic clock. I also used style references from art nouveau and gothic artifacts, just because I love those styles.

