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Jon Bailey, “Y[our-s]UKKAH”, 2010
Jon Bailey’s concept design for a Sukkah, employing generative modelling software, would project images on it’s exterior according to its interior activities using a simple system of shaped and stacked tubes. The tubes could also be used as containers for messages passed from one visitor to the next.
Ryan Teehee, “Old City Hall”, 2010
Ryan Teehee’s deceptively simple and restrained digital collages describe extreme climate change in a cool atmospheric way. Ryan was the winner of a competion run by London’s Metro Newspaper and the Museum of London, see his winning image here.
Robert Graves and Didier Madoc Jones, “The Gherkin”, 2010
Robert Graves and Didier Madoc Jones’s vision of London’s “Gherkin” is part of an exhibition “Postcards from the Future” (Museum of London until February 2011 then at the National Theatre until June 2011). The artists visualise a future city altered by the effects of climate change.
Daniel Brown, “Dress Me Up In 360″, 2010
Visit Daniel Brown’s “Play-Create” site for fascinating (and occasionally cheeky) interactive artworks, including a clock that allows you to see the volume of hours passed in a day as a proportion of the whole day, and this one which lets you dress a spinning model in a variety of outfits…
Mehmet Akten, “Reincarnation/Iatrogenesis”, 2009
Working with the Rambert Dance Company Mehmet “Memo” Akten created software that tracks and responds to dancers’ movements, the result – in this “off-shoot film” – is hypnotic.
Golan Levin, “Floccugraphs”, 1999
Golan Levin’s software uses the dark and light of a photograph to effect the progress of black and white lines. They are inspired by Vik Muniz’s “Pictures in Thread”.
Robert Graves & Didier Madoc Jones, “Protocells in Venice”, 2009
Artists Robert Graves and Didier Madoc Jones visualise the protocell research of Rachel Armstrong, using it to shore up the foundations of a sinking Venice.
Posted in Architecture, Environmental, Landscape Tagged 3d, Composited, Photography, photoshop, rendered, Scientific Comments closed
Keith Brown, “Bough”