Johnston, Lucy,

Digital handmade : craftsmanship and the new industrial revolution / Lucy Johnston. - 287 pages : colour illustrations ; 26 cm

Jekaterina Apale -- Assa Ashuach -- Atmos -- Jorge Ayala -- Barry X Ball -- Louise Lemieux Bérubé -- Francis Bitonti -- Isaïe Bloch -- Tord Boontje -- Valissa Butterworth -- Emily Cobb -- Lia Cook -- Elena Corchero -- Michiel Cornelissen -- Lionel T. Dean -- Wim Delvoye -- Olaf Diegel -- David D'Imperio -- Michael Eden -- Factum Arte -- Front -- Adam Nathaniel Furman -- Bram Geenen -- Antony Gormley -- David Graas -- Bathsheba Grossman -- GT2P -- Michael Hansmeyer -- Joshua Harker -- Del Harrow -- Patrick Hoet -- Ralf Holleis -- Monika Horcicová -- Anthony Horrigan -- Dorry Hsu -- Inflexions -- Aki Inomata -- Linlin & Pierre-Yves Jacques -- Sophie Kahn -- Joris Laarman -- Cinnamon Lee -- Lee Allen Eyewear -- Paul Loebach -- Amy Roper Lyons -- Lucas Maassen -- Magnolia Editions -- Geoffrey Mann -- Luc Merx -- Gareth Neal -- Nendo -- Nervous System -- Marc Newson -- Elaine Yan Ling Ng -- Neri Oxman -- Jan Plechac -- Matthew Plummer-Fernandez -- Louis Pratt -- Karina Nĝkleby Presttun -- Anastasia Radevich --- Cedric Rágot -- Zach Raven -- Guto Requena -- Nadia-Anne Ricketts -- Ariel Rojo -- Jack Row -- Lin Stanionis -- Elisa Strozyk -- Laszlo Tompa -- Unfold -- UUfie -- Dirk Vander Kooij -- Irish Van Herpen -- Eric van Straaten -- Michaella Janse van Vuuren -- Jeroen Verhoeven -- Marcel Wanders -- Jo Hayes Ward -- WertelOberfell -- Zhang Zhoujie -- Ariel Zuckerman.

While the industrial revolution of the nineteenth century diminished the role of the craftsperson in the manufacturing process, the digital revolution has had a less devastating effect. Today's digital technologies have given rise to entirely new working methods, skill sets, and consumer products that don't eliminate, but enrich traditional hand techniques. Digital Handmade presents eighty international designers, artists, and craftsmen who combine the precision and flexibility of computing and digital fabrication with the skill and tactility of the master artisan to create unexpected and desirable objects and products. These pioneers include Louise Lemieux Bérubé, a Canadian artist whose work integrates photography and weaving; Australian jewelry designer Cinnamon Lee, whose designs explore the relationship between hand and machine; and Japanese artists Nendo, who produce ceramic pieces that employ both digital fabrication and ancient traditional methods.

0500517851 9780500517857


Design and technology.
Computer art.
Art and technology.
Three-dimensional printing
Three-dimensional modeling

N7433.8 / .J64 2015

745.40922