Monday, September 30, 2013

Crumple



Crumple, an animated aluminum sculpture was my contribution to Washington's popular Nuit Blanche on the night of September 28-29, 2013. Crumple is composed of 128 identical hinged pieces. The sculpture changes shape with changes in the inflation of its internal membrane. Crumple is based on Di Francesco and Guitter's idea of a completely foldable surface—a triangulated surface that can fold into a single stack of triangles. With origami you make a flat portion of the plane and fold it into a shape, with a completely foldable surface you make a stack of triangles and unfold it into a triangulated curved surface.

Monday, April 8, 2013

"Brief Boom" at Strathmore

Brief Boom is a sculpture in sandstone and copper wire done in a new textile technique I call zip crochet. I have donated it to the Strathmore Drawing for Art, to be held later this month.

Immediate inspiration for Brief Boom is the fracking boom, but more generally, from watching the success of a species that "succeeds" only by rapidly consuming the ecosystems that sustain it.



Thursday, March 7, 2013

Interaction



Interaction can be read as a bit of crochet or a Feynman diagram representing the absorption of a photon. It seems crochet and Feynman diagrams (classical diagrams that are meant to be probabilistically superimposed to represent quantum reality) obey the same mathematical rules. This work is on view in Mathematically Inclined from March 8 through May 5, 2013 at the Takoma Park Community Center in Takoma Park, MD.

Progression



This sculpture is on view in Mathematically Inclined at the Takoma Park Community Center from March 8 through May 5, 2013. This work is a figure-eight coil of galvanized steel wire in the process of being converted into a walking chain stitch.

Derivation



This sculpture is on view in Mathematically Inclined at the Takoma Park Community Center from March 8 through May 5, 2013. The round coil of wire at the top has been converted below into the type of figure-eight coil used in zip crochet.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Closure

This sculpture will be on view in Mathematically Inclined at the Takoma Park Community Center March 8 through May 5, 2013. This work uses zip crochet, a hook-less crochet technique still under development.