This Pottery Printer Explores the Boundary Between Digital and Analog Machines
In celebration of the inaugural Melbourne Design Week, which took place in March 2017, Chilean design studio Great Things to People (gt2P) presented their Catenary Pottery Printer, aimed at exploring the boundaries between digital and analog machines. Throughout the design festival, local designers and students used the pottery printer to create their own custom works, with visitors welcomed to watch the craft in action.
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
In celebration of the inaugural Melbourne Design Week, which took place in March 2017, Chilean design studio Great Things to People (gt2P) presented their Catenary Pottery Printer, aimed at exploring the boundaries between digital and analog machines. Throughout the design festival, local designers and students used the pottery printer to create their own custom works, with visitors welcomed to watch the craft in action.
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
Developed in collaboration with staff and students from the RMIT University School of Architecture and Design, and displayed under the Federation Court atrium at the National Gallery of Victoria, the project reveals the thought process behind the creation of non-standard objects ? a process often reserved for inside computers.
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
Despite its technological undercurrents, gt2P?s printer operates throug...
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
In celebration of the inaugural Melbourne Design Week, which took place in March 2017, Chilean design studio Great Things to People (gt2P) presented their Catenary Pottery Printer, aimed at exploring the boundaries between digital and analog machines. Throughout the design festival, local designers and students used the pottery printer to create their own custom works, with visitors welcomed to watch the craft in action.
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
Developed in collaboration with staff and students from the RMIT University School of Architecture and Design, and displayed under the Federation Court atrium at the National Gallery of Victoria, the project reveals the thought process behind the creation of non-standard objects ? a process often reserved for inside computers.
Courtesy of Tobias Titz / National Gallery of Victoria
Despite its technological undercurrents, gt2P?s printer operates throug...
| -------------------------------- |
|
|
Villa M by Pierattelli Architetture Modernizes 1950s Florence Estate
31-10-2024 03:55 - (
architecture )
Leça da Palmeira House by Raulino Silva
31-10-2024 03:55 - (
architecture )
