The document discusses on-demand production and mass customization techniques. It mentions concepts like variant management, quality movements, component manufacturing, universal machines, product configurators, and examples of companies like BMW, Cannondale, and Macintosh that utilize these techniques to produce customized products on demand.
The document discusses on-demand production and mass customization techniques. It mentions concepts like variant management, quality movements, component manufacturing, universal machines, product configurators, and examples of companies like BMW, Cannondale, and Macintosh that utilize these techniques to produce customized products on demand.
This document lists various sources and links related to interactive art installations that involve light, including websites for artists who have created works using light sculptures, projections, and other technologies to interact with light in public spaces. Some of the artists and art groups mentioned include Random International, Squidsoup, Ocean of Light, and Zimoun, known for light-based artworks that are interactive and involve kinetics or responses to human movement.
This document summarizes the works of American artist Dan Flavin and Italian artist Maurizio Nannucci. It describes several of Dan Flavin's installations from the 1960s that used fluorescent light tubes in different configurations and colors. It also mentions one of Maurizio Nannucci's installations from 1999 called "Where to Start From" that utilized fluorescent lighting. The document provides details on the artists, titles, materials, dimensions and locations of several key artworks by both Flavin and Nannucci focused on using fluorescent lighting.
James Turrell is an American artist known for his light installations. Some of his most notable works include projection pieces from the 1960s that use colored lights and skyspaces, outdoor installations creating the illusion of sky and light through architectural features. His largest ongoing project is Roden Crater, a natural crater he is transforming into a massive naked-eye observatory through tunnels, alcoves and light. Turrell's works aim to manipulate viewer perception of light, space and time through minimal use of technology.
Olafur Eliasson is a Danish-Icelandic artist born in 1967 in Copenhagen. He studied art in Copenhagen from 1989 to 1995 and has had a studio in Berlin since 1995. From 2009 to 2014 he also directed the Institute for Spatial Experiments at the University of the Arts Berlin. The document provides biographical information on Eliasson and images of some of his large-scale environmental and interactive art installations such as the New York City Waterfalls from 2008 and Riverbed from 2014.
Daan Roosegaarde is a 36-year-old Dutch artist and inventor who runs Studio Roosegaarde. His studio creates interactive designs for the landscape of the future using both digital and molecular technologies. Some of his projects include Waterlicht, which involved lighting up canals and waterways in the Netherlands with glowing algae and LED lights, and Glowing Lines, which uses solar and kinetic energy to light up bike paths and roads. Roosegaarde's goal is to use technology in new ways to enhance public spaces and improve people's experience of the built environment.
This document lists various sources and links related to interactive art installations that involve light, including websites for artists who have created works using light sculptures, projections, and other technologies to interact with light in public spaces. Some of the artists and art groups mentioned include Random International, Squidsoup, Ocean of Light, and Zimoun, known for light-based artworks that are interactive and involve kinetics or responses to human movement.
This document summarizes the works of American artist Dan Flavin and Italian artist Maurizio Nannucci. It describes several of Dan Flavin's installations from the 1960s that used fluorescent light tubes in different configurations and colors. It also mentions one of Maurizio Nannucci's installations from 1999 called "Where to Start From" that utilized fluorescent lighting. The document provides details on the artists, titles, materials, dimensions and locations of several key artworks by both Flavin and Nannucci focused on using fluorescent lighting.
James Turrell is an American artist known for his light installations. Some of his most notable works include projection pieces from the 1960s that use colored lights and skyspaces, outdoor installations creating the illusion of sky and light through architectural features. His largest ongoing project is Roden Crater, a natural crater he is transforming into a massive naked-eye observatory through tunnels, alcoves and light. Turrell's works aim to manipulate viewer perception of light, space and time through minimal use of technology.
Olafur Eliasson is a Danish-Icelandic artist born in 1967 in Copenhagen. He studied art in Copenhagen from 1989 to 1995 and has had a studio in Berlin since 1995. From 2009 to 2014 he also directed the Institute for Spatial Experiments at the University of the Arts Berlin. The document provides biographical information on Eliasson and images of some of his large-scale environmental and interactive art installations such as the New York City Waterfalls from 2008 and Riverbed from 2014.
Daan Roosegaarde is a 36-year-old Dutch artist and inventor who runs Studio Roosegaarde. His studio creates interactive designs for the landscape of the future using both digital and molecular technologies. Some of his projects include Waterlicht, which involved lighting up canals and waterways in the Netherlands with glowing algae and LED lights, and Glowing Lines, which uses solar and kinetic energy to light up bike paths and roads. Roosegaarde's goal is to use technology in new ways to enhance public spaces and improve people's experience of the built environment.