Bio Manufacturing Entertainment is Julie Gendron + Emma Hendrix. Since the mid-2000’s, they have collaborated using multiple media, including video, sound, installation, analog/digital technologies, the internet and performance. Hendrix + Gendron create in order to express what is hidden in plain sight and to encourage the creative capacities of observers and participants. Using sound, installation and visual forms, Gendron + Hendrix take everyday actions, objects and environments, and manipulate them in order to conjure multiple meanings from an unending exploration occurring within themselves with the goal of helping to form new points of view for their audiences. Works Perdere: to lose, to waste, to destroy 2021 Manufacturing Entertainment “Perdere: to lose, to waste, to destroy” explores the rapidly deteriorating landscapes surrounding Tuktoyaktuk, NT along Canada’s northwest coast. Through contemplative drone footage and a soundscape using hydrophone and natural soundscape recordings, this work bears witness to the tragic effects of climate change along the shores of the Beaufort Sea. Going now here slowly 2019 Manufacturing Entertainment “Going now here slowly.” juxtaposes Vancouver’s Burrard Inlet against the unpaved switchback highway known only as “The Hill.” The views are at once in flux and in stasis; changing and repeating; exploring the struggle against inertia while fighting against inevitable change; going now here slowly. When Once There Was 2018 Manufacturing Entertainment When Once There Was, composed from audio and video footage from around the Peace River Valley, is a non-narrative exploration of the shores of the Peace River; an area the BC Government approved for flooding as part of the development of Site ‘C’, the largest hydroelectric dam in the area. vertigo digression number three 2016 Manufacturing Entertainment vertigo digression number three is a structured A/V improvised performance detailing the minutiae of the artists working lives in Vancouver against the documented landscapes and soundscapes of Seyðisfjörður, East Iceland.