78 posts categorized "Visual Arts"

01/10/2013

Old Cigarette Vending Machines Dispense Artwork

Art_o_mat_machine

Giddy attendees at this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas report encountering an old, bright yellow cigarette vending machine. Only instead of smokes, the machine dispenses artwork in cellophane-wrapped cartons.

Nanoprinter Achieves Insane Resolution

The converted cigarette machine is called an Art-o-mat and for a mere $5 you can get a pack of art. Wired.com blogger Roberto Baldwin snapped a photo of one yesterday and wrote, "I only have $3. Sure there’s a metaphor for 4K TVs in there somewhere."

Art-o-mats have been around for a little while now, but they're becoming more prevalent as a way to bring art to the masses in an entertaining way. Back in the late '90s, North Carolina artist Clark Whittington noticed his friend had a Pavlovian response to crinkling cellophane.

"When the friend heard someone opening a snack, he had the uncontrollable urge to have one too," Whittington wrote on the Art-o-mat site. So the artist took advantage of that response, converting a banned cigarette vending machine into an art dispenser, appropriately, for a show at a cafe in Winston-Salem. When the show was over, the cafe owner asked to keep the machine.

In the past several years, Art-o-mats have found homes well beyond North Carolina, from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon. They've gone from a one-off to a novelty to a nationwide phenomenon. One even arrived here in Denver last year at the Access Gallery in the Santa Fe arts district.

Gallery owner Damon McLeese stocked it with professional artists' work, as well as works created by teens with disabilities who participate in art programs. Inside the machine, packs contained a wide array such as earrings made from computer chips, beaded keychains and drawings of wolves, according to the Denver Post's Colleen O'Connor.

Crystals You Drink Every Morning: Big Pic

I find it hard to argue with the idea of these banned machines finding new lives delivering art with $5 tokens. If everyone bought art instead of cigarette packs and snacks, we'd be a heck of a lot healthier. Possibly even smarter, too.

Photo: An Art-o-mat machine in Las Vegas. Credit: Miss Shari, via Flickr.

12/28/2012

Control This Roach Via Twitter

TwitterRoach3_Ransom-thumb-550xauto-108378

We've told you before about remote-controlled cockroaches being strapped with steering wheels so that the insects could help rescue earthquake victims. Now roaches are skittering into a more aesthetic venue -- the art gallery. As part of the "Life, in some form" exhibit by the Chicago Artists Coalition (CAC), Dallas-based artist Brittany Ransom debuted her Twitter-Remote-Controlled Cockroach.

PHOTOS: Top 10 Social Networking Sites

Similar to the RoboRoach, Ransom's device used a small electronic backpack that attached to the cockroach's antenna, enabling the insect to respond to stimulated left or right commands. Using Arduino hardware and custom-programmed software, Ransom was able to link the roach to Twitter. Visitors to the exhibit could send commands to the @TweetRoach account such as #TweetRoachLeft and #TweetRoachRight.

As her artist bio explains, Ransom likes to explore the "paradoxical bond between human, nature, its inhabitants and the co-evolution between the living and budding technological innovation while questioning these technologies."

Ransom told CNET that her project mirrors the digital overstimulation that many of us experience everyday. She also said she wanted to see if the cockroaches could eventually learn to adapt and ignore her system's signals.

BLOG: Virtual Tech Lets You Swap Bodies

"At what point does its intelligence and ability take over? How much does it take before we are all desensitized to overstimulation?" Ransom wrote in an email to CNET. "As we, as human beings, grow more cyborgian and interconnected through social media, this project helps us participate in discovering the answer."

via CNET Crave

Credit: Brittany Ransom




Email:


12/19/2012

Sinful Robot: XXX Virtual Reality

Sinful-robot-622x505

If news of the impending apocalypse has you bummed that you won't get to sow your wild oats at Yub-Yum, Amsterdam's android sex club of the future, here's something else you're going to miss out on: Sinful Robot. Hyped as the "world's most immersive virtual reality erotic encounter," Sinful Robot, created by a California startup of the same name, is being designed for the forthcoming Oculus Rift virtual reality headset.

In what I imagine to be a cross between the Batsignal and the Mudflap girl, Sinful Robot put out a call for 3D programmers, artists and animators on Reddit, also known as the Gotham of the Internet.

BLOG: Robot Prostitutes, the Future of Sex Tourism

Among a lascivious list of, ahem, open positions at Sinful Robot is a 3D character artist. Applicants should be engorged with "expert knowledge of creating realistic female models" and have the ability to create orgasmic "organic models." For those with expert knowledge on the male anatomy, it's not yet clear where you measure up.

Reddit user Illusionweaver69, who claims to be Sinful Robot's co-founder Jeroen Van den Bosch, is giddy about what Oculus Rift and the future holds.

"I have been waiting for many years for technology to become immersive enough so it [can] trick your brain to accept the virtual reality as reality, but the Rift does really do that," he wrote. "So now we can finally make an erotic adventure game that will actually be exciting!"

BLOG: Facebook More Tantalizing Than Sex

However, if the Earth does open up like a split piece of fruit on Friday, only to reveal a fiery chasm of magma and crumbling rock, here's a good soundtrack to usher in the end of days. "You Don't Know What's Going On," so take your best friend's hand, shrug, and leap into the great beyond.

via Gizmag

Credit: Sinful Robot

 



Email:


12/07/2012

Watch All The Planes Land: Gotta-See Video

6a00d8341bf67c53ef0167675b1a01970b-800wi

Growing up, I used to sit at the end of the runway by my local airport with my Dad and watch the planes come in. After 9/11, simply stopping by the fence is enough to get security in a tizzy, but here you can get all your childhood flights in 30 seconds.

Watch all the airplanes that landed at San Diego's airport for a whole day, but in one video. The clever thing is, rather than going with a simple time lapse, the videographers overlayed all the airplanes at regular speed. The shot is not only surreal but beautifully executed. I chuckled when that little plane caught up at the end. via iO9

Have a Gotta-See Video to recommend? Tweet it to @Discovery_News with the hashtag #GottaSeeVideos and don't miss today's Must-Read News Nuggets.

Watch more Discovery Curiosity video here.



Email:


Radiometer-light-278

12/06/2012

Print Your Own 3D Holiday Gifts

2-1

When it comes to crafting your own holiday gifts, sure, it's the thought that counts. Still, some of these thoughts could use a little more brio, especially if you're the one gluing uncooked macaroni to a picture frame at the last minute.

BLOG: Nanoprinter Achieves Insane Resolution

Openhouse, an NYC-based company that specializes in creating pop up events, wants you to put down the noodles and glue gun and instead:

Imagine a corner store where you can print chairs, doorknobs, espresso cups, toys and more. Replacement parts for cars, new headphones, custom halloween masks, shoes and accessories. Where you can buy and test out printers and software, too.

Doesn't sound too different than Santa's workshop, does it? In some ways it is, though Openhouse calls it 3DEA, a month-long holiday 3-D printing pop-up shop that they believe may be the precursor to a permanent store.

Openhouse partnered with Shapeways, Ultimaker and UP! to bring 3DEA to the Eventi Hotel. The pop-up event is free and open to the public through December 27. So if you're in a holiday gift-giving rut, I suggest popping in for these reasons:

3DEA features an Inventor Bar, Customization Center, DIY Hub, Body Scanning, classes, lectures, and a whole section for children. At 3DEA, you can customize, invent and replicate products with the help of expert consultants. You’ll be able to browse home printers from Ultimaker and UP!, order holiday gifts through Shapeways.com and learn the ropes of the manufacturing revolution. 3D printing is nothing short of teleportaton: If you can think it, you can make it here.

To help spread a little more of that naughty holiday cheer, there's even an adult-themed section behind a curtain for those 18 and over.

BLOG: 3D Printer Turns You Into An Action Figure

Now, if you can get your mind out of the gutter, what gift would you print at 3DEA? Let us know in the comments below.

via Inhabitat

Credit: 3DEA



Email:


12/05/2012

Comics Journalism Hits the Tablets

Symbolia-278x225
Symbolia is to journalism what the graphic novel is to literature. Credit: Symbolia

You've heard of comic books; you've heard of magazines. Now a new generation of journalists is merging the two to tell non-fiction stories about everything from environmental destruction in California and the mysteries of the Congo River to our gut's microbiome and an obscure psychedelic band from Zambia.

The merger has resulted in a new tablet-based magazine called Symbolia, which was launched this week. Unlike text-heavy narratives that readers may find in magazines such as the Atlantic or the New Yorker, this new digital experience tells stories in illustrated, interactive panels.

For example, one feature story -- "Live Long, Die Quick" -- opens with an illustration of Chinese microbiologist Zhao Liping wondering if tailoring his diet to the microbes in his stomach could help him loose weight.

The subsequent panels show that by eating Chinese yam and bitter lemon, Zhao can tweak his microbial makeup and slim down. There's animation, including wiggling microbes and tappable infographics, so the users can choose how deep they want to dive into the story.

Founded by Chicago-based journalist, media consultant and comic enthusiast Erin Polgreen, Symbolia is to journalism what the graphic novel is to literature.

NEWS: Nanoprinter Achieves Insane Resolution

Traditional media such as newspapers and magazines continue to tailspin as they struggle for identity in the digital age. While Symbolia isn't seeking to replace the old guard, it recognizes that a fresh voice needs to be brought into the arena.

Symbolia started about three years ago when Polgreen said she began noticing a new crop of comics creators who were also doing journalism.

"I was really into the work Sarah Glidden,Ted Rall and Matt Bors had been doing, specifically because they had been using Kickstarter to fund trips for non-fiction comics on conflict zones," Polgreen told Discovery News. "They had been quite successful."

Not only that, these non-fiction story tellers were flying completely under the radar of traditional news organizations.

And then one day, Polgreen said she had a "kapow moment."

"I was reading an issue of Wonder Woman, then I switched over to reading a magazine on my new iPad I got off of Craigslist," Polgreen said. "Everything just kind of clicked together, like picking a lock. That's our origin story, if you will."

Polgreen applied for and received a couple of grants -- one from J-Lab and the McCormick Foundation's New Media Women Entrepreneurs program and the other from the International Women's Media Foundation -- that helped transform her idea of into a fully-developed tablet magazine of illustrated journalism.

PHOTOS: Tech That Brings the Family Together

Symbolia's first issue was launched on Monday, Dec. 3, and is available free, either as an interactive iPad app (an Android app may soon follow) or in PDF form. Starting in 2013, it will be published every other month and cost $11.99 for six issues.

Polgreen's goal up front is to use clever design, great color and visual narrative devices to talk about complicated issues. She says she wants to bring a fresh energy back into storytelling, one that isn't always evident with text-heavy content.

"Comics journalism represents not only this opportunity to be playful, fun and have a cozy hand-crafted feel to your product, but it's also this way to bring more people in. You bring in more visual learners -- people who think about things or interact in different ways than someone who might read 10,000 words of text," Polgreen said.

She cites one of the most widely circulated newspapers in the United States as an example of how a more visual format can appeal to readers.

"When USA Today started out, people pooh-poohed that they had infographics and thought the paper was speaking down to the masses," Polgreen said. "But it's one of the papers that's still around. I don't think they're on fabulous financial footing but they broke the wave of varying design in news."

John Fennell, an associate professor at the Missouri School of Journalism who is heavily involved with the weekly, student-run Vox Magazine, said he thinks Symbolia could be another wave-breaker.

“We study news and magazine startups and try to understand what’s working and what’s not," he said. "I have to say, Symbolia is the freshest startup I’ve seen in a long time."

New magazines come into the fold all the time and it's a constant experiment within the industry to see which ones will stick, says Fennell.

“We’re in this cycle where we can pick up news anywhere and that’s why magazines like Newsweek have folded and Time is seeing some difficulties," he said. "So when you get something like” Symbolia, “where it’s a combination of something that no one’s ever done before, I think it’s worth paying attention to.”

Even with slick design, sharp reporting and engaging storytelling, Polgreen understands how difficult it is to remain profitable in today's media landscape. However, she believes her loyal audience -- a Venn diagram of journalists, nerds, technologists and comic fans -- will do more than just save the day.

DNEWS Nugget: Superman Quits Daily Planet

"One of the reasons I thought I could really make a go with Symbolia as an actual business venture is I've been watching web comics for the last 10 to 15 years grow into entities that actually support their creators full-time," Polgreen said.

Fennell agrees.

“All successful magazines have niche audiences. General-interest magazines just aren’t working anymore,” he said. With Symbolia, “here you have a built-in audience -- a loyal audience -- that likes graphics and knows the subject of graphic novels and literature.”

The magazine industry may be on shaky ground, but for Polgreen, this built-in audience is the cornerstone of what she hopes will be Symbolia's solid foundation.

"Comics fans are wonderfully supportive of the people and art that they love. There's a very strong emotional connection," she said. "It's my hope to bring in more people who read comics on a regular basis and help them engage more with news and what's happening in the world."




Email:


11/28/2012

Wind Data Becomes Smart Wall Art

Windswept_facade

Perhaps we're so used to seeing wind turbines turning in one direction or weather vanes slowly pivoting that we forget how complex wind can be. A new wind-driven kinetic facade in San Francisco serves as a mesmerizing reminder.

Wind Power Without the Blades: Big Pics

The Randall Museum in San Francisco commissioned the art installation from local designer Charles Sowers, whose public art and science exhibits bring attention to natural phenomena such as ice forming on a puddle, often with special instrumentation. His piece for the museum's exterior, called "Windswept," took more than a year and a half to develop.

As the salty California breeze hits the façade, which is 20 feet tall and 35 feet wide, it moves 612 freely rotating directional arrows. Sowers originally started with a four-foot square panel prototype covered in different arrow types that he mounted on his apartment window at Baker Beach, according to ArchDaily.

Ultimately he settled on a design for arrows made from anodized aluminum that were mounted on a metal architectural panel using stainless steel axles and rivet nuts. "Windswept" also serves to mask the air intake on the museum's concrete exterior.

"The whole piece sits off the wall to allow an equal volume of air to enter a ventilation intake mounted in the middle of the existing wall," Sowers explained in a statement about the work.

Work It! Human-Powered Machines: Photos

The arrows don't all move in unison. Instead, they reveal the ripples and swirls we'd usually just call a nice breeze. Co.Design's Mark Wilson compared the effect to watching "the Plinko of air currents." To me, however, a video of "Windswept" was more like seeing dust in a beam of sunlight. Sowers has made the invisible visible in a big way.

Photo: The art installation "Windswept" in San Francisco by Charles Sowers. Credit: Charles Sowers (video)



Email:


11/09/2012

Deadly Tesla Lightning Battle: Gotta-See Video

Gotta-see-videos

Superheroes like Iron Man make their way to being super through technology, and now we have some of those powers today.

This video shows two people battling it out using electricity. They're throwing lightning bolts at each other while doused in red and blue lights. The whole choreographed show took place on the streets of Belfast, Ireland and though the fun starts at about 1:40, these guys are workin' it the whole time.

Tesla coils at high amperage allow electrical current to jump through the air through conductive material. Human bodies DO conduct electricity but these performers are wearing special suits to protect their fragile human forms.

If only science gladiators could battle it out like this...via dVice

Want to recommend a video? Tweet it to @Discovery_News with the hashtag #GottaSeeVideos.

Don't miss today's Must-Read DNews Nuggets and you can watch Discovery Curiosity video here.



Email:


11/06/2012

LED Lights Transform Park into Wonderland

Led-park-japan-622

Japan’s Nabana no Sato Botanical Garden, located on the island of Nagashima in Kuwana in the northern Mie prefecture, looks like a magically wonderland. Millions of LED lights have been used to create illuminated hedgerows, tunnels and trees. One installation replicates Mt. Fuji, the iconic strato-volcano in Japan.

Each year the botanical gardens light up their grounds over the holidays. The displays begin in November and run until the end of March. This year, the theme is "nature," and thank goodness they're using LEDs, which consume far less electricity than other bulbs. Every inch of the park, it seems, is lit up. 

Led-park-japan2-622

For more photos, see My Modern Met and also Wide Island View.

via Inhabitat

Credit: ©Emrank



Email:


Star Wars Icons Made into Origami: DNews Nugget

Dnews-nuggets-278x225Star Wars Icons Folded into Origami: Software engineer Martin Hunt, who lives in London, has found a way to fold Star Wars ships, droids and other characters into origami. He started when he was studying math at Southampton University. He has created 20 designs already, which you can see on his website, Starwarigami, and has planned a list of 83 more designs which will be coming from a galaxy far far away.

In October, Hunt showed some of his paper versions at the London MCM Expo and Comic Con, and currently he's seeking a publisher for a book. via Wired

GET MORE MUST-READ DNEWS NUGGETS HERE!

 

Star-wars-origami-xwing-622

Credit: Martin Hunt



Email:


Categories

My Other Accounts

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 04/2005