The Digital Archive Project (2016), also Commonly referred to as the D.A.P, serves as a dynamic extension of the Study LO 1.9 initiative. The objective was to digitally archive bacteria through groundbreaking conservation techniques but also to be able to to reverse the process, retrieving back a digitised subject into its organic form.

The D.A.P provides a mesmerising exploration of the potential intersection between digital and organic realms, offering a glimpse of a near future where a subject could be archived digitally and then reestablished later into an organic body .

What makes this endeavour particularly intriguing is the fact that these images of bacteria are not authentic but instead a record of a computer screen in which photographs were set into motion by the artist to simulate these revolutionise methods of archiving