Anna Dumitriu is a pioneering visual artist based in Brighton, England, specialising in BioArt. Her installations, interventions and performances use digital, biological and traditional media including bacteria, digital technology and craft techniques, working with diverse audiences. Dumitriu's work is at the forefront of art and science collaborative practice, particularly working with microbiology, infectious diseases, robotics, artificial life technology, and art/science ethics. She was the . She is involved in public engagement in science, arts in healthcare and has taught of art/science practice to artists, scientists, art students and medical/science students internationally. She is Artist in Residence with at The University of Oxford, and at the at Public Health England. Additionally Dumitriu holds Visiting Research Fellowship: Artist in Residence roles at The University Of Hertfordshire in the in the , and in . She was formerly a Visiting Research Fellow: Artist in Residence in the Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics, part of the at Sussex University between 2005 and 2014. She was co-chair of the of the Alan Turing Centenary. Dumitriu is founder and Director of the and was lead artist on the "" project working with the in Amsterdam and co-author of the book of the same name. She has written extensively on the notion of the "". Her work has an international exhibition profile and has been featured in , and . Her "" project explores around historical and contemporary notions of Tuberculosis, whole genome sequencing of bacteria, global health and antimicrobial resistance. Recent artwork focusses on synthetic biology, antibiotic resistance, and sequencing of bacterial DNA. She created "" in 2017 which uses the CRISPR gene editing technique of homologous recombination to edit the genome of E. coli bacteria to remove an antibiotic resistance gene and replace it with the phrase "Make Do and Mend" written into its DNA. The CRISPR Journal described the project as "perhaps the first application of CRISPRgene editing technology in BioArt" and continued "To date, the pioneer in using CRISPR technology for Bio-Art is Anna Dumitriu, a well known British bio-artist. Dumitriu conceived, developed, and exhibited for the first time in 2017 an artwork based on the use of CRISPR at the LifeSpace Gallery for science and art research as part of the Future Emerging Art and Technology exhibition." In January 2014, Dumitriu told The Guardian: "Art, for me, is a way of investigating the world. In that way, I see no real distinction between art and science at all."