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BID Lab Opening, May 14, 2004
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Design, Technology, and the Human Experience (the positive side) Carlo H. Séquin Computer Science Division
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Technical Designs … CCD Camera, Bell Labs, 1973 Soda Hall, Berkeley, 1994 RISC chip, Berkeley, 1981 “Octa-Gear”, Berkeley, 2000
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Aesthetic Designs … What is the role of the computer in: u aesthetic optimization, u the creative process ?
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Collaboration with Brent Collins “Hyperbolic Hexagon II”
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Brent Collins: Stacked Saddles
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Scherk’s 2nd Minimal Surface Normal “biped” saddles Generalization to higher-order saddles (monkey saddle)
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“Hyperbolic Hexagon” by B. Collins u 6 saddles in a ring u 6 holes passing through symmetry plane at ±45º u = “wound up” 6-story Scherk tower u Discussion: What if … l we added more stories ? l or introduced a twist before closing the ring ?
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Closing the Loop straight or twisted
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Brent Collins’ Prototyping Process Armature for the "Hyperbolic Heptagon" Mockup for the "Saddle Trefoil" Time-consuming ! (1-3 weeks)
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“Sculpture Generator I”, GUI
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V-art Virtual Glass Scherk Tower with Monkey Saddles (Radiance 40 hours) Jane Yen
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Collins’ Fabrication Process Example: “Vox Solis” Layered laminated main shape Wood master pattern for sculpture
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Slices through “Minimal Trefoil” 50%10%23%30% 45%5%20%27% 35%2%15%25%
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u One thick slice thru sculpture, from which Brent can cut boards and assemble a rough shape. u Traces represent: top and bottom, as well as cuts at 1/4, 1/2, 3/4 of one board. Profiled Slice through “Heptoroid”
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Emergence of the “Heptoroid” (1) Assembly of the precut boards
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Emergence of the “Heptoroid” (2) Forming a continuous smooth edge
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Emergence of the “Heptoroid” (3) Smoothing the whole surface
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The Finished “Heptoroid” u at Fermi Lab Art Gallery (1998).
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Various “Scherk-Collins” Sculptures
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Rapid Prototyping by FDM
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Hyper-Sculpture: “Family of 12 Trefoils” W=2 W=1 B=1 B=2 B=3 B=4
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“Cohesion” SIGGRAPH’2003 Art Gallery
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Snow-Sculpture, 12 Feet Tall
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International Snow-Sculpting Championships Breckenridge, Colorado, January 2003
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“Whirled White Web” Silver Medal Winner, Breckenridge 2003
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“Whirled White Web” The Design Component: u Find a shape that has some aesthetic qualities as an abstract sculpture. u The shape should (roughly) fit the given snow block dimensions: 10 10 12 feet tall. u The shape must be strong enough to hold up as a snow sculpture. u The sculpture has to be constructible by a team of five during a 4-day period. u Also need a good title and a good story…
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The Role of the Computer (1) Exploring different possibilities.
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The Role of the Computer (2) Fine-tuning the most promising design
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The Role of the Computer (3) Making a detailed 3D model
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The Role of the Computer (4) Preparing construction drawings
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Plenty of manual steps too … Making templates from computer prints, ( magnified with the classical grid method)
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Removing lots of snow … Day 1
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Day 2: Making a Torus
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Day 3, pm: Flanges, Holes
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Day 4: Geometry Refinement
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Day 5, am: Surface Refinement
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“House Cleaning”
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“Whirled White Web”
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Conclusions (1) u The computer plays an important role also for “Esthetic Engineering.” u Virtual Prototyping can save time and can tackle sculptures of a complexity that manual techniques could not conquer.
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Conclusions (2) u The computer is not only a great visualization and prototyping tool, u It also is a generator for new ideas and u an amplifier for an artist’s inspiration.
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Inspiration: Brent Collins’ “Pax Mundi”
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UI for “Viae Globi” Shapes
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Many Related Sculptures May Emerge
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Discussion Topic What can we do in BID to help bridge the gap between Art and Engineering ?
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