Friday, May 25, 2012

And Now, Laser-Sintered, 3D-Printed 'Fur' Tiles

And Now, Laser-Sintered, 3D-Printed 'Fur' Tiles:
The recent talk of haptic technologies refers, implicitly or explicitly, to touchscreens and the like, and while capacitive latency and the ever-growing arsenal of gestures are certainly paramount for glass surfaces, the empirical world is far richer in breadth and depth. As some have argued, tactility is paramount to our experience of the world around us. (For example, the ritual exchange of business cards during the recent NY Design Week offered a broad sample of the different textures, weights and densities of cardstock alone.)

BREAD-Cilia-0.jpg

Which brings us to BREAD's latest project, produced for Clerkenwell Design Week: the interdisciplinary design studio is pleased to present "Cilia," a foray into additive layer manufactured 'fur' tiles:
Started as a commissioned investigation into the possibilities of BREAD's material research for application in interior surfaces, Cilia is a set of selectively laser sintered surface tiles made up of tens of thousands of fibres. Each tile is made from a single piece of Nylon, yet its surface is soft to the touch.

Through the use of digital modelling and Netfabb's Selective Space Structures software every element of geometry can be controlled and tweaked to the designers intent. Allowing control over each tile in terms of visual impact and feel. Cilia challenges our notions of not only the geometric but material possibilities of Additive Layer Manufacturing and shows how the combination of modern modelling and manufacturing allows us to control these elements with an unprecedented level of detail that traditional processes cannot match.

BREAD-Cilia-1.jpg

BREAD-Cilia-2.jpg

Don't miss the video, after the jump...
(more...)

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

32,16 and 8




Salt Sculptures: 12 Stunning Artworks by Motoi Yamamoto

Salt Sculptures: 12 Stunning Artworks by Motoi Yamamoto: [ By Steph in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]


To many people around the world, salt is just a substance that makes food taste better. But to the Japanese, it’s deeply symbolic, an indispensable part of death rituals that imparts purification of the body and soul. Artist Motoi Yamamoto draws upon the role of salt in his culture, using it as a art medium that he painstakingly packs into sculptures or squeezes into intricate drawings. The artist aims to confront viewers with the reality of death, in the form of stark white installations that mimic trailing vines, networks of neural nerves and endless paths of pure sand or snow. Here are 23 photos and 2 videos of 12 of Yamamoto’s most stunning salt artworks.

Floating Garden


Yamamoto began working with salt as an art medium after his sister’s death from brain cancer at 24 years old. Many of his works, including the ‘Floating Garden‘ series, resemble microscopic imagery of the brain.

Labyrinth Series






“Drawing a labyrinth with salt is like following a trace of my memory. Memories seem to change and vanish as time goes by. However, what I seek is the way in which I can touch a precious moment in my memories that cannot be attained through pictures or writings. I always silently follow the trace, that is controlled as well as uncontrolled from the start point after I have completed it.”

UTSUSEMI



The artist packed salt into a tall, narrow staircase for the work ‘Utsusemi’. Giving in to the natural processes of destruction and decay, Yamamoto allows the salt to crumble over time, often intentionally leaving the sculptures out in the rain so they can melt, changing with exposure to the elements until they dissipate altogether.

A Corridor to Remembrance


Yamamoto reveals his intention behind this large-scale work, ‘A Corridor of Remembrance.’ “With the art works entitled “a corridor of remembrance” or “land of meditation”, what Motoi Yamamoto represents could be described as an unknowable realm in which the notion of death unfolds. These site-specific works, consisting of a massive quantity of bricks made of salt, piled up in layers together with rusty iron slabs, overwhelm the viewers in size and volume. Concealed by the slabs, one is not able to see the interior and depth of the edifice but a narrow path emerges from between the slabs. The path, which is too narrow for adults to go in to, gives a sense of a potency that demands a distinct physical response, as it leads to total darkness. It gives an interstice in the flux of time and space of everydayness in the present day, and embodies a sense of unconceivable and yet our physical instinct can respond to it.”

Forest of Beyond


One of his most incredibly complex works, ‘Forest of Beyond’ was created for the one-year anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan in 2011. Currently on display at the Hakone Open Air Museum, ‘Forest of Beyond’ resembles the roots of a tree.

Forest of the Skyscraper


An 11-foot-tall ‘skyscraper’ made of salt, ‘Forest of the Skyscraper’ is another work that was allowed to crumble, thus changing significantly between its initial creation and its removal from the gallery.

Forest of This World




Connecting the role of salt in Japanese culture to the art and meditative act of sand gardening, ‘Forest of This World‘ was installed at the Hakone Open-Air Museum in Kanagawa from July 2011 to March 2012.

Sakura


The petals of cherry blossoms are perfectly rendered in Yamamoto’s series ‘Sakura‘. Looking as if they just fell from a tree, the petals are layered in such a way that they look amazingly three-dimensional and realistic.

Room


Among Yamamoto’s earliest salt art works is ‘Room‘, an installation at 300days Gallery in Tokyo in September 2000. The pure whiteness of the salt applied to the far wall of the gallery blends into the rest of the room, making it look as if the space is beginning to fall apart.

Fountain of Remembrance


Cast boat forms float outward in a circle in ‘Fountain of Remembrance’, an outdoor installation at the Garden of the Sculptures in Veracruz, Mexico. The installation was captured both before and after a rain that dissolved much of the salt.

Unfulfilled


Bursting forth from the gallery wall, a large triangular slab of iron recalls the bow of a rusting ship breaking through sea ice topped with snow. “The void of an image in the darkness is a crack which induces the feeling of the unknowable beyond our everyday life. In that, one might be led to a sacred sphere through the path of salt.”

Wedge


‘Wedge’ was an installation at the Telecom Center in Tokyo that looked like a path of snow, starting at the front door and ascending up a staircase.




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