Outsourced Art

Interesting article in Wired on MDM, a prop shop artists employ to turn their ideas into reality. I had no idea artists might outsource to such a high degree! I guess it seems obvious in hindsight, when you consider pieces that require heavy-duty engineering and safety considerations like Jericho:

Sometimes Schofield gets assignments that seem to defy the laws of physics. Two years ago, artist Anselm Kiefer set out to erect Jericho in the courtyard of the Royal Academy. A pair of towers would be built from concrete slabs balanced on top of each other with no supports or fasteners—and the public would be allowed to step inside the chambers at the base of each stack. Schofield worked with a structural engineer to calculate the ideal weight and pitch of the slabs, then arranged motion-sensitive lasers around the perimeter of the courtyard to detect any movement that might presage a collapse.

<tags> , </tags>
01/23/09 @ 04:12 PM

Hi

I'm Jim Biancolo, and this is my weblog. It's mostly links to stuff I find interesting (here are some of my favorites), but some stuff is mine. I also created Listology in the previous millennium (raised it from a pup but I stopped playing with it and I felt bad so I gave it away to a good home), and the fitness weblog Lean & Hungry Fitness, which is gone, subsumed, but it was a cool domain while it lasted.

Archives

Spillover

If I don't post often enough for you, you can check my delicious account for the only slightly less good also-rans.

Subscribe

Everything: RSS / Atom / Twitter
Spillover: RSS
Just Fitness: RSS / Atom

"RSS? Atom? What in the blazes are you carryin' on about, boy?"

If you prefer, enter your address below to get updates via e-mail. Powered by Feed My Inbox (they have a good privacy policy).

Contact

I've turned off comments, but I'm not a complete recluse. I like email (feedback, tips, suggestions, etc.). I am also, tentatively, on Twitter.