BY MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Marshmallow Laser Feast (Ersin Han Ersin, Barnaby Steel, Robin McNicholas) is a London based experiential artist collective reinterpreting ideas of human perception and experience. Employing a wealth of creative disciplines and underpinned by research, they invite participants to navigate with a sensory perception beyond the everyday. In collaboration with artists, scientists, musicians, poets, programmers, and engineers, MLF has been leaving a slug trail of sensory experiences as they journey through the cosmos. Fusing architectural tools, contemporary imaging techniques and performance with tactile forms, they sculpt spaces that lay dormant until animated by playful investigation. Their works have been included in major exhibitions and institutions including; the Barbican Centre, Factory International, YCAM, DDB Seoul, Sundance Film Festival, Montreal, SXSW and Lisbon Architectural Triennale.
Full Credits:
Words and Voice: Merlin Sheldrake
Executive Producers: Carolina Vallejo, Eleanor (Nell) Whitley, Mike Jones
Music, Sound Design and Spatialisation: James Bulley
Lead Producer: Emma Hamilton
Lead Artist: Quentin Corker-Marin
Houdini Technical VFX Artist: Nicolas Le Dren
Infrastructure Lead: Andrew Robinson
Head of Studio: Sarah Gamper Marconi
Studio Administrator & Production Assistant: Alexandra McRobbie
Scientific Advisors & Contributors
Francis Martin
Jamie Lochhead
BY MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Marshmallow Laser Feast (Ersin Han Ersin, Barnaby Steel, Robin McNicholas) is a London based experiential artist collective reinterpreting ideas of human perception and experience. Employing a wealth of creative disciplines and underpinned by research, they invite participants to navigate with a sensory perception beyond the everyday. In collaboration with artists, scientists, musicians, poets, programmers, and engineers, MLF has been leaving a slug trail of sensory experiences as they journey through the cosmos. Fusing architectural tools, contemporary imaging techniques and performance with tactile forms, they sculpt spaces that lay dormant until animated by playful investigation. Their works have been included in major exhibitions and institutions including; the Barbican Centre, Factory International, YCAM, DDB Seoul, Sundance Film Festival, Montreal, SXSW and Lisbon Architectural Triennale.
Full Credits:
Words and Voice: Merlin Sheldrake
Executive Producers: Carolina Vallejo, Eleanor (Nell) Whitley, Mike Jones
Music, Sound Design and Spatialisation: James Bulley
Lead Producer: Emma Hamilton
Lead Artist: Quentin Corker-Marin
Houdini Technical VFX Artist: Nicolas Le Dren
Infrastructure Lead: Andrew Robinson
Head of Studio: Sarah Gamper Marconi
Studio Administrator & Production Assistant: Alexandra McRobbie
Scientific Advisors & Contributors
Francis Martin
Jamie Lochhead
BY MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Marshmallow Laser Feast (Ersin Han Ersin, Barnaby Steel, Robin McNicholas) is a London based experiential artist collective reinterpreting ideas of human perception and experience. Employing a wealth of creative disciplines and underpinned by research, they invite participants to navigate with a sensory perception beyond the everyday. In collaboration with artists, scientists, musicians, poets, programmers, and engineers, MLF has been leaving a slug trail of sensory experiences as they journey through the cosmos. Fusing architectural tools, contemporary imaging techniques and performance with tactile forms, they sculpt spaces that lay dormant until animated by playful investigation. Their works have been included in major exhibitions and institutions including; the Barbican Centre, Factory International, YCAM, DDB Seoul, Sundance Film Festival, Montreal, SXSW and Lisbon Architectural Triennale.
Full Credits:
Words and Voice: Merlin Sheldrake
Executive Producers: Carolina Vallejo, Eleanor (Nell) Whitley, Mike Jones
Music, Sound Design and Spatialisation: James Bulley
Lead Producer: Emma Hamilton
Lead Artist: Quentin Corker-Marin
Houdini Technical VFX Artist: Nicolas Le Dren
Infrastructure Lead: Andrew Robinson
Head of Studio: Sarah Gamper Marconi
Studio Administrator & Production Assistant: Alexandra McRobbie
Scientific Advisors & Contributors
Francis Martin
Jamie Lochhead
BY MARSHMALLOW LASER FEAST
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Fly Agaric I , 2024
Poetics of Soil Series
Somerset House, Soil Exhibition, 2025
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
Through an audio-visual approach, "Poetics of Soil" challenges our understanding of life's cycle, biological symbiosis, and deep ecology, exploring the intricate entanglement between species.
Fly Agaric I is a 4-minute long 1-channel video installation with 10.2-channel audio.
Fly Agaric I (Poetics of Soil)
Artist Statement
“Biological realities are never black-and-white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world—our investigative tools —be so? “
― Robin Wall Kimmerer
Beneath our feet hums another world, expansive and inventive, yet concealed from view. Fly Agaric I is part of Marshmallow Laser Feast’s Poetics of Soil series illuminating the hidden kingdoms of life underground.
This ongoing project reframes our relationship with soil and the diverse species it harbours—from trees and fungi to bacteria, archaea, and protozoa. Each species provides a unique lens on the microcosms that sustain life on Earth, knitting soil into living networks with complexity beyond anthropogenic webs.
For at least half a billion years, fungi have played the role of nature’s recycler, breaking down dead plant and animal matter into smaller molecules that are returned to the soil. Circular by nature, this process enriches the soil and makes nutrients available for plants and forest life to reuse. This symbiosis between plants and fungi weaves the Earth’s soils into living networks, comparable in complexity to neural pathways.
The relationship between plants and fungi gave rise to the biosphere as we know it. Fungi has long occupied the indigenous imagination, where it entwines with mysticism in science and the interconnectedness of more-than-human species. The Poetics of Soil series seeks to create a window into this unseen world - connecting us anew with these ancient, elemental systems some of us have long been disconnected from.
“We are not individuals. No living thing is. Every organism is a symbiosis: an enmeshed and embodied network of relationships.”
― Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life
In our current state of climate catastrophe, it is critical to understand our interconnectedness with the natural world. By acknowledging fungi as a network of beings we can start to dispel the myth of our separation from nature and explore what it is to be something other than human - perhaps more than human.
Marshmallow Laser Feast (Ersin Han Ersin, Barnaby Steel, Robin McNicholas) is a London based experiential artist collective reinterpreting ideas of human perception and experience. Employing a wealth of creative disciplines and underpinned by research, they invite participants to navigate with a sensory perception beyond the everyday. In collaboration with artists, scientists, musicians, poets, programmers, and engineers, MLF has been leaving a slug trail of sensory experiences as they journey through the cosmos. Fusing architectural tools, contemporary imaging techniques and performance with tactile forms, they sculpt spaces that lay dormant until animated by playful investigation. Their works have been included in major exhibitions and institutions including; the Barbican Centre, Factory International, YCAM, DDB Seoul, Sundance Film Festival, Montreal, SXSW and Lisbon Architectural Triennale.
Full Credits:
Words and Voice: Merlin Sheldrake
Executive Producers: Carolina Vallejo, Eleanor (Nell) Whitley, Mike Jones
Music, Sound Design and Spatialisation: James Bulley
Lead Producer: Emma Hamilton
Lead Artist: Quentin Corker-Marin
Houdini Technical VFX Artist: Nicolas Le Dren
Infrastructure Lead: Andrew Robinson
Head of Studio: Sarah Gamper Marconi
Studio Administrator & Production Assistant: Alexandra McRobbie
Scientific Advisors & Contributors
Francis Martin
Jamie Lochhead