Monday, January 25, 2016

Apodemy


https://vimeo.com/54038054
by Katerina Athanasopoulou

Plato likens the human soul with a cage, where knowledge is birds flying. We’re born with the cage empty and, as we grow, we collect birds and they go in the cage for future use. When we need to access knowledge we put our hand in the cage, hunt for a bird – and sometimes catch the wrong one.

Ornithology uses the term “Zugunruhe” to describe the turbulent behavior of birds before they migrate, whether free or caged.

These two images, birds inhabiting the human soul and the distress of the migrating bird became the starting points for this film, commissioned on the theme of Emigration.

A flock of birds circles around and moves a cage vehicle, seeking escape from a city half finished and abandoned, with roads interrupted by fragments of fallen statues. Those hands are simultaneously the pursuit of knowledge and also the heroes/leaders of the past that we have rejected but are still haunting us.

In a time when Europe seems to be imploding, this is my portrait of Athens.

http://kineticat.co.uk/

Saturday, December 19, 2015

«The Circular Ruins» by Jorge Luis Borges

... ... nothing could be expected from those pupils who passively accepted his teaching but that he might, however, hold hopes for those who from time to time hazarded reasonable doubts about what he taught. The former, although they deserve love and affection, could never become real; the later, in their dim way, were already real.

From time to time, he was troubled by the feeling that all this had already happened, but for the most part his days were happy.

His triumph and his peace were blemished by a touch of weariness.

His life purpose was fulfilled; the man lived on in a kind of ecstasy.

Every father cares for  the child he has begotten—he has allowed—in some moment of confusion and happiness.


Saturday, November 28, 2015

"Deschooling Society" by Ivan Illich

Introduction

Together we have come to realize that for most men the right to learn is curtailed by the obligation to attend school.

Universal education through schooling is not feasible... ... The current search for new educational funnels must be reversed into the search for their institutional inverse: educational webs which heighten the opportunity for each one to transform each moment of his living into one of learning, sharing, and caring.

Why We Must Disestablish School

Many students, especially those who are poor, intuitively know what the schools do for them. They school them to confuse process and substance. Once these become blurred, a new logic is assumed: the more treatment there is, the better are the results; or, escalation leads to success. The pupil is thereby "schooled" to confuse teaching with learning, grade advancement with education, a diploma with competence, and fluency with the ability to say something new. His imagination is "schooled" to accept service in place of value. Medical treatment is mistaken for health care, social work for the improvement of community life, police protection for safety, military poise for national security, the rat race for productive work. Health, learning, dignity, independence, and creative endeavor are defined as little more than the performance of the institutions which claim to serve these ends, and their improvement is made to depend on allocating more resources to the management of hospitals, schools, and other agencies in question.

In these essays, I will show that the institutionalization of values leads inevitably to physical pollution, social polarization, and psychological impotence: three dimensions in a process of global degradation and modernized misery. I will explain how this process of degradation is accelerated when nonmaterial needs are transformed into demands for commodities; when health, education, personal mobility, welfare, or psychological healing are defined as the result of services or "treatments." I do this because I believe that most of the research now going on about the future tends to advocate further increases in the institutionalization of values and that we must define conditions which would permit precisely the contrary to happen. We need research on the possible use of technology to create institutions which serve personal, creative, and autonomous interaction and the emergence of values which cannot be substantially controlled by technocrats. We need counterfoil research to current futurology.

I want to raise the general question of the mutual definition of man's nature and the nature of modern institutions which characterizes our world view and language. To do so, I have chosen the school as my paradigm... ... My analysis of the hidden curriculum of school should make it evident that public education would profit from the deschooling of society, just as family life, politics, security, faith, and communication would profit from an analogous process.

Modernized poverty combines the lack of power over circumstances with a loss of personal potency.

All over the world the school has an anti-educational effect on society: school is recognized as the institution which specializes in education. The failures of school are taken by most people as a proof that education is a very costly, very complex, always arcane, and frequently almost impossible task.

In the United States the per capita costs of schooling have risen almost as fast as the cost of medical treatment. But increased treatment by both doctors and teachers has shown steadily declining results.

Obligatory schooling inevitably polarizes a society; it also grades the nations of the world according to an international caste system. Countries are rated like castes whose educational dignity is determined by the average years of schooling of its citizens, a rating which is closely related to per capita gross national product, and much more painful.

United States is proving to the world that no country can be rich enough to afford a school system that meets the demands this same system creates simply by existing, because a successful school system schools parents and pupils to the supreme value of a larger school system, the cost of which increases disproportionately as higher grades are in demand and become scarce.

Neither learning nor justice is promoted by schooling because educators insist on packaging instruction with certification. Learning and the assignment of social roles are melted into schooling. Yet to learn means to acquire a new skill or insight, while promotion depends on an opinion which others have formed. Learning frequently is the result of instruction, but selection for a role or category in the job market increasingly depends on mere length of attendance.

Universal schooling was meant to detach role assignment from personal life history: it was meant to give everybody an equal chance to any office. Even now many people wrongly believe that school ensures the dependence of public trust on relevant learning achievements. However, instead of equalizing chances, the school system has monopolized their distribution.

Most learning happens casually, and even most intentional learning is not the result of programmed instruction. Normal children learn their first language casually, although faster if their parents pay attention to them. Most people who learn a second language well do so as a result of odd circumstances and not of sequential teaching. They go to live with their grandparents, they travel, or they fall in love with a foreigner. Fluency in reading is also more often than not a result of such extracurricular activities. Most people who read widely, and with pleasure, merely believe that they learned to do so in school; when challenged, they easily discard this illusion.
      But the fact that a great deal of learning even now seems to happen casually and as a byproduct of some other activity defined as work or leisure does not mean that planned learning does not benefit from planned instruction and that both do not stand in need of improvement. The strongly motivated student who is faced with the task of acquiring a new and complex skill may benefit greatly from the discipline now associated with the old-fashioned schoolmaster who taught reading, Hebrew, catechism, or multiplication by rote. School has now made this kind of drill teaching rare and disreputable, yet there are many skills which a motivated student with normal aptitude can master in a matter of a few months if taught in this traditional way. This is as true of codes as of their encipherment; of second and third languages as of reading and writing; and equally of special languages such as algebra, computer programming, chemical analysis, or of
manual skills like typing, watchmaking, plumbing, wiring, TV repair; or for that matter dancing, driving, and diving.

No doubt not only the teacher but also the printer and the pharmacist protect their trades through the public illusion that training for them is very expensive.

Experiments conducted by Angel Quintero in Puerto Rico suggest that many young teenagers, if given the proper incentives, programs, and access to tools, are better than most schoolteachers at introducing their peers to the scientific exploration of plants, stars, and matter, and to the discovery of how and why a motor or a radio functions.

The deschooling of society implies a recognition of the two-faced nature of learning. An insistence on skill drill alone could be a disaster; equal emphasis must be placed on other kinds of learning. But if schools are the wrong places for learning a skill, they are even worse places for getting an education. School does both tasks badly, partly because it does not distinguish between them. School is inefficient in skill instruction especially because it is curricular.

Schools are even less efficient in the arrangement of the circumstances which encourage the open-ended, exploratory use of acquired skills, for which I will reserve the term "liberal education." The main reason for this is that school is obligatory and becomes schooling for schooling's sake: an enforced stay in the company of teachers, which pays off in the doubtful privilege of more such company. Just as skill instruction must be freed from curricular restraints, so must liberal education be dissociated from obligatory attendance. Both skill-learning and education for inventive and creative behavior can be aided by institutional arrangement, but they are of a different, frequently opposed nature.

Most skills can be acquired and improved by drills, because skill implies the mastery of definable and predictable behavior. Skill instruction can rely, therefore, on the simulation of circumstances in which the skill will be used. Education in the exploratory and creative use of skills, however, cannot rely on drills. Education can be the outcome of instruction, though instruction of a kind fundamentally opposed to drill. It relies on the relationship between partners who already have some of the keys which give access to memories stored in and by the community. It relies on the critical intent of all those who use memories creatively. It relies on the surprise of the unexpected question which opens new doors for the inquirer and his partner.
      The skill instructor relies on the arrangement of set circumstances which permit the learner to develop standard responses. The educational guide or master is concerned with helping matching partners to meet so that learning can take place. He matches individuals starting from their own, unresolved questions. At the most he helps the pupil to formulate his puzzlement since only a clear statement will give him the power to find his match, moved like him, at the moment, to explore the same issue in the same context.
      Matching partners for educational purposes initially seems more difficult to imagine than finding skill instructors and partners for a game. One reason is the deep fear which school has implanted in us, a fear which makes us censorious. The unlicensed exchange of skills-even undesirable skills-is more predictable and therefore seems less dangerous than the unlimited opportunity for meeting among people who share an issue which for them, at the moment, is socially, intellectually, and emotionally important.

Both the exchange of skills and matching of partners are based on the assumption that education for all means education by all... ... A deschooled society implies a new approach to incidental or informal education.

Education did not compete for time with either work or leisure. Almost all education was complex, lifelong, and unplanned.

If the greatest fruit of man's labor should be the education he receives from it and the opportunity which work gives him to initiate the education of others, then the alienation of modern society in a pedagogical sense is even worse than its economic alienation.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

"FOR YOUR OWN GOOD: Hidden cruelty in child-rearing and the roots of violence" by Alice Miller

Introduction 

In Prisoners of Childhood I took pains to point out that looks expressing disapproval and rejection that are directed at the infant can contribute to the development of severe disturbances, including perversions and compulsion neuroses, in the adult. 

An enormous amount can be done to a child in the first two years: he or she can be molded, dominated, taught good habits, scolded, and punished-without any repercussions for the person raising the child and without the child taking revenge. The child will overcome the serious consequences of the injustice he has suffered only if he succeeds in defending himself, i.e., if he is allowed to express his pain and anger. If he is prevented from reacting in his own way because the parents cannot tolerate his reactions (crying, sadness, rage) and forbid them by means of looks or other pedagogical methods, then the child will learn to be silent. This silence is a sign of the effectiveness of the pedagogical principles applied, but at the same time it is a danger signal pointing to future pathological development. If there is absolutely no possibility of reacting appropriately to hurt, humiliation, and coercion, then these experiences cannot be integrated into the personality; the feelings they evoke are repressed, and the need to articulate them remains unsatisfied, without any hope of being fulfilled. It is this lack of hope of ever being able to express repressed traumata by means of relevant feelings that most often causes severe psychological problems. We already know that neuroses are a result of repression, not of events them- selves. I shall try to demonstrate that neuroses are not the only tragic consequences of repression. 



The Last Act of the Silent


The greatest cruelty that can be inflicted on children is to refuse to let them express their anger and suffering except at the risk of losing their parents' love and affection. 

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

SIGGRAPH15 & Asia et al

Electronic Theater
Amir & Amira

League of Legends Music: The Curse of the Sad Mummy
Citius, Altius, Fortius





The Alchemist's Letter
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fXbf0QSiLv4
The Present
https://vimeo.com/92537532






~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vortex Immersion Media for full dome and projection mapping
http://vorteximmersion.com

Roland MonoFab series (take STL files)
 

3DSystems in SC
http://3dprinters.3dsystems.com/printer-buyers-guide/?gclid=Cj0KEQjw6vquBRCow62uo-_J_YYBEiQAMO6Hio7TrNg4S0un3cSnrK2GyOfIKKAdCEgU7-I75Xi-JT0aAkt48P8HAQ

iSense for 3D scan

PaperPulse: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZ8PF9wPQu4

Function UNO is the cheap version of the original.

Factum Arte - make excellent replica
http://www.factum-arte.com/
https://vimeo.com/factumarte

chibitronics circuit stickers
http://chibitronics.com/
circuit sticker sketch book
http://technolojie.com/circuit-sticker-sketchbook/
Jie Qi: http://technolojie.com/

Conductak: Stick Circuits: conductak.com
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsJu9z1kors

conductive copper tape
conductive ink pen

Giga Macro (macro scan): http://gigamacro.com/

Video mapping hardware/software: Pandora's box, mad mapper, vdmx

Fab Academy: http://fabacademy.org

Bougainvillea

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SIGGRAPH ASIA 2015

3D Anamorphosis by Francesco de Comité
http://www.lifl.fr/~decomite/tdprinting/tdprinting.html






"To afar the water flows" video installation by Yuge Zhou
https://vimeo.com/126562578
https://vimeo.com/128138606


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
New Zealand Book Council - Going West
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_jyXJTlrH0

Monday, March 23, 2015

«The Aleph» by Jorge Luis Borges 1945 (Translation by Norman Thomas Di Giovanni in collaboration with the author)

After the age of fifty, all change becomes a hateful symbol of the passing of time. 

... an Aleph is one of the points in space that contains all other points. 

Beatriz was a woman, a child, with almost uncanny powers of clairvoyance, but forgetfulness, distractions, contempt, and a streak of cruelty were also in her...

I arrive now at the ineffable core of my story. ... ... Alanus de Insulis, of a sphere whose center is
everywhere and circumference is nowhere; Ezekiel, of a four-faced angel who at one and the same time moves east and west, north and south. (Not in vain do I recall these inconceivable analogies; they bear some relation to the Aleph.) Perhaps the gods might grant me a similar metaphor, but then this account would become contaminated by literature, by fiction. ... ... In that single gigantic instant I saw millions of acts both delightful and awful; not one of them occupied the same point in space, without overlapping or transparency. What my eyes beheld was simultaneous, but what I shall now write down will be successive, because language is successive.

... ... I saw the coupling of love and the modification of death; I saw the Aleph from every point and angle, and in the Aleph I saw the earth and in the earth the Aleph and in the Aleph the earth; I saw my own face and my own bowels; I saw your face; and I felt dizzy and wept, for my eyes had seen that secret and conjectured object whose name is common to all men but which no man has looked upon — the unimaginable universe.

I felt infinite wonder, infinite pity.

------------ from elsewhere ------------
Being an agnostic means all things are possible, even God, even the Holy Trinity. This world is so strange that anything may happen, or may not happen. 1971

Monday, March 16, 2015

Notes of 3D Printing

Objet Connex 3D Printer (350, 500)

Z-Corp 3D printers

Sense 3D scanner and iSense 3D scanner

123D Catch Autodesk scan software
Memento Autodesk scan software
Meshmixer Autodesk production software

Stratasys printing

Solidworks tools

CNC machine

Fiberglass, resin, silicon for sculpture ("Proxy"?)

Printing with resin for details

3D Printing services
Metrix Create:Space (Seattle)
Shapeways (NYC)
Sculpteo (US/France)

Canon inkjet printer with hybrid materials for 3D printing

"What Things May Come" 3D Printing Exhibition / Brown Symposium at Southwestern University
partial artists: Kim Thoman, Bathsheba Grossman, Rinus Roelofs, Joshua Harker, Christian Lavigne, Salvatore Musumeci, Mary Hale Visser, Patrick Saint-Jean, Alexandre Vikine
(a PDF of all artists is on DVD0049)

unrelated: Prezi presentation software