Hybrid Reassemblage: An Exploration of Craft, Digital Fabrication and Artifact Uniqueness
Author(s)
Buechley, Leah; Zoran, Amit
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Digital fabrication, and especially 3D printing, is an emerging field that is opening up new possibilities for craft, art and design. The process, however, has important limitations; in particular, digitally designed artifacts are intrinsically reproducible. In stark contrast, traditional craft artifacts are individually produced by hand. The authors combine digital fabrication and craft in their work involving object destruction and restoration: an intentionally broken crafted artifact and a 3D printed restoration. The motivation is not to restore the original work but to transform it into a new object in which both the destructive event and the restoration are visible and the re-assembled object functions as a memorial.
Date issued
2013-02Department
Program in Media Arts and Sciences (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)Journal
Leonardo
Publisher
MIT Press
Citation
Zoran, Amit, and Leah Buechley. “Hybrid Reassemblage: An Exploration of Craft, Digital Fabrication and Artifact Uniqueness.” Leonardo 46.1 (2013): 4–10. © 2013 The MIT Press
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0024-094X
1530-9282