Breathing Earth retrieves earthquake data observed daily around the world and visualizes each event—its epicenter and magnitude—as small protruding spheres on the surface of a white globe. The result is an animation in which the Earth appears to breathe and pulse as if it were alive. Technically, the project uses the latest seismic information published online by the International Data Centre (IDC), which aggregates data from a global seismograph network originally developed to detect nuclear tests. This data was automatically collected and updated each day, and the most recent two weeks were rendered into a continuously refreshed GIF animation. By connecting ecosystems that span different layers—nature (tectonic activity), technology (sensors and networks), and information (data visualization)—the work enables viewers to experience an “expanded ecology” in which the physical Earth and informational environments merge. In doing so, it invites the audience to sense themselves as part of this system, as if participating in the planet’s own neural circuitry. For this exhibition, the original GIF animations have been rediscovered and restored from the archive.