Dann Disciglio (b. 1993) is a transdisciplinary artist whose research examines how naturalism and humanism are reconfigured through the deliberate entangling of biological and computational systems. Working with trees, bees, bacteria, sensing devices, AI models, and lots and lots of gear, Disciglio constructs sculptural and spatial systems that grant audiences access to forms of perception, embodiment, and temporality that are otherwise humanly inaccessible. His installations and performances treat non-humans and technology not as metaphors but as parallel interlocutors—agents whose signals, behaviors, and material logics complicate anthropocentric assumptions and expand the ways humans encounter the world. Disciglio is Visiting Professor of Art & Technology at Lewis & Clark College, where he co-directs the Experimental Art Research (EAR) Forest, a permanent outdoor platform for ecological and technological inquiry.