Jordan is known for installations that merge art and scientific inquiry, with a focus on nonhuman ecologies, interspecies interactions, ocean environments and technology. Merging the human with nonhuman creates a universe imbued with a deep sensibility for ecological and social issues. Visitors of these dynamic ecosystems find recognizable elements yet the environments remain abstract, facilitating an imaginative space that the artist intends to help reprogram how humans are represented in the world among other species. Another significant part of Jordan’s artistic practice involves regenerative and socially engaged practice. Projects with UP Projects (Bodies of Water) and Tatort Paderborn (A Human Reconciliation with Water) activated local communities in
ecological restoration, water protection, and collective stewardship. Jordan had developed several research themes that feed into artistic work. 'Sex ecologies', developed with Pauline Doutreluingne, is a study of nonhuman sexual reproduction and queerness, highlighting how these systems challenge Western, patriarchal assumptions about sexuality and survival. Jordan creates machine ‘critters’ that are part of an ongoing series of ‘Artificial Stupidity,’ serving as a critical lens on artificial intelligence, exposing both its failures and its poetic potential. She has collaborated with the Schmidt Ocean Institute and TBA21–Academy. Critics such as Stefanie Hessler, James Voorhies, and Chus Martínez have situated her work within urgent discourses on speculative ecologies, queer embodiment, and environmental transformation. Jordan has held a professorship in Digitale Medien at HfG Karlsruhe and is now professor for environmental practices at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg. == Awards ==