Friendship, Friction, Fracture - Wearable Edition
Silvia Askanase and 4 OthersLalita BellachPJ Griffiths
Mathew Paul
Rowan McCrea + Privacy: Public
Friendship, Friction, Fracture
Wearable Edition
By: Lalita, PJ, Mathew, Silvia, and Rowan
Friendship, Friction, Fracture
By: Lalita, PJ, Mathew, Silvia, and Rowan
Friendship, Friction, Fracture
By: Lalita, PJ, Mathew, Silvia, and Rowan
thesis
These wearables are based on our dance about colonization which focuses on the Spanish colonizing Latin America. Each piece uses constriction to increase the viewer's empathy for the colonized people. One prototype constricts around the indigenous people while the other prototypes use constriction to manipulate the size and power of the Spanish.
Design Objectives
- Exaggerate movement of the dancers
- Help the audience empathize with the indigenous people
- Use a form of constriction to show the indigenous people's loss of freedom
Process (first half of studio)
- Brainstorm
- Precedent Research
- Sketches
- Prototype round one
- Wizard Of Oz Prototype
- Bodystorming
The main design of the first prototype involved a tesselated pattern on fabric, which is actuated by strings that "scrunch" the wearable up
Precedents
Mood board
Sketches/diagrams
Input/Output Digram
The audience approaches the dead bodies
The wearable scrunches up
Proximity of audience to the dead bodies & Manual Triggering
Processing
Input
Output
Ultrasonic
Sensor &
gyroscope
DC Motor
Electronics Demo
Material Research
Final Demo
Final Demo
Final Demo
Full Renders
- Integrating the electronics into the wearable
- Finalizing materials for the rigid plates and fabric
- Make the wearable visually constricting but not cumbersome for the dancers
- Continue to design tessellated pattern to match contours of whole body.
Next Steps
Prototype description (Silvia & Lalita)
The prototypes are paper wearables made to exaggerate the movements of the Spanish while they are plotting. As the hand gestures get more extreme, the wearable goes through more drastic changes, and the faster the Spanish move, the faster the wearable switches between shapes.
Precedents
Mood board
Sketches/diagrams
Input/Output Digram
The arm moves around
The wearable changes shape
The accelerometer senses the movement and signals to the servo to move the same percent as the arm moved, thus pulling on the strings attached to the paper, tightening it.
Accelorometer
Servo
Input
Processing
Output
Material Research
Kirigami is a variation of origami, the Japanese art of folding paper. In kirigami, the paper is cut as well as being folded, resulting in a three-dimensional design that stands away from the page. Kirigami typically does not use glue
Electronics Demo
Final Demo
Next Steps
- Connect electronics to the prototypes
- Revise design and placement
- Add more pieces to exaggerate movements
- Connect all the paper pieces
- Explore different materials
- work on choreography
These wearables are based off of our dance about colonization which focuses on the Spanish colonizing Latin America. Each piece uses constriction to increase the viewer's empathy for the colonized people. One prototype constricts around the indigenous people while the other prototypes use constriction to manipulate the size and power of the Spanish.