In 2015, Imp Kerr conceptualized a protocol designed to predict the voice of a deceased person (philosopher
Friedrich Nietzsche in the case study) based on genotype data. To generate the voice, a vocal tract and larynx were 3D-printed. In 2020, researchers used a similar procedure to recreate the voice of a 3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy—by 3D-printing a replica of his vocal tract. Imp Kerr study was covered and presented as real on the
Canadian public radio CBC during the show As It Happens on March 20, 2015, and commented as a "piece of performance art" elsewhere. "Impressed with the scientific imaginativeness and attention to detail — the artist knows the relevant science (and has a terrific ear for the conventions of scientific communication)," wrote Jason Eisner, Professor at Johns Hopkins University. In 2016, Kerr followed up on the Nietzsche voice project with Nietzsche’s Shadow, an artwork involving the purported collection of shadow fragments associated with Nietzsche in
Èze, France, on a path (locally called “
Chemin de Nietzsche”) where the philosopher regularly hiked in the 1880s. Kerr and a team of scientists allegedly gathered residue described as “electromagnetic radiation, nitrogen, and xenon,” dated to 1884–1888, which was subsequently condensed into a so-called “photonic fluid” and bottled in flasks by Imp Kerr Laboratories in Manhattan . ==Crypto Casinos==