Monica Bate ‘’Anatomía para el movimiento’’
(parte de linea 2 y linea 3)
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Netherlands

seen from Belgium
seen from China
seen from Belgium
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from United States
Monica Bate ‘’Anatomía para el movimiento’’
(parte de linea 2 y linea 3)
Memory Programmable Muscle Wire
Please join us at the opening of our newest commission, MUSCLE WIRE, Saturday 25 March 2-5pm, 2017.
MUSCLE WIRE is a research led residency and exhibition involving two contemporary artists, Amy Ash and Emma Finn, and a diverse group of A Level students from three south London Schools.
For one month, Ash and Finn worked alongside fifteen dedicated young people, using Gerald Moore Gallery as their studio space. Together, they carried out collaborative action-based research related to future of memory.
MUSCLE WIRE aims to offer an alternative to traditional learning environments by inviting a group of young people to work alongside artists, both leading and assisting in the research generated. The artists were bought together by a shared interest in humankind's ever-evolving relationship with information gathering and storage. The young people involved were selected from the diverse communities of Eltham College, Thomas Tallis School and Erith School.
Amy Ash's practice moves between curatorial projects, teaching and learning, installation and other forms of making. Amy's work aims to reveal the staging within the construction and regeneration of personal and cultural cosmologies, through explorations of contiguity and situated knowledge.
Using moving image and narrative, Emma Finn aims to transport viewers to uncomfortable places that sit between reality and invention. Marrying hi-fi with lo-fi techniques, she constructs worlds where multiple planes operate independently of one another, reflecting how technology allows us to create our own private heterotopias, as we attempt to communicate with one another.
In keeping with the gallery's mandate to operate as a space which considers new approaches to learning, the MUSCLE WIRE commission is a space where regular educational hierarchies are dismantled. Everyone leads and everyone learns. The exhibition is the culmination of our research and experience together.
EVENT DETAILS:
When: Saturday 25th March, 2-5pm, 2017.
Where: Gerald Moore Gallery, Mottingham, London, SE9 4RW.
I have been working on a collab project with a fashion student and my junior. The theme concept still something similar with Atta-matic. We’re trying to use muscle wire, which not that easy but fun to see the result like this.
Nitinol-Flexinol - MikroModellBau.De - Webshop
January 23, 2014 at 08:01AM http://ift.tt/1hlN1jv
high low tech - Electronic Origami Flapping Crane
January 20, 2014 at 11:13AM http://ift.tt/1fPVrD9
programmingsketches - Diagram for a nano muscle wire control using Arduino
January 20, 2014 at 11:13AM http://ift.tt/1e1Y6W8