Author: Kbaumlier

Kristen Baumlier’s work spans the full spectrum of interdisciplinary media, including performance, interactive installation, video and audio works.
3D Print – A Pizza?

3D Print – A Pizza?

3D printers have been in the news lately with stories of people who are printing in sugar.  But what about printing in pizza?  I wanted to post this, since I thought this was a notable way to make food, here as well as in outer space.

A 3D printer machine designed by engineer Anjan Contractor recently printed a pizza as a test.  This printer could be used as a new way to make food for astronauts who are on long missions in the future. Usually astronauts eat food from tubes and in tightly sealed packages, but with a 3D printer they could print out and cook meals.

In order to print the pizza, the machine prints the pizza in “blocks.”  A block of dough is printed before a block of sauce and then cheese. The result is a square personal pizza. The food cartridges for the system are intended to last thirty years.  There is a video online where you can watch the pizza printer in action. I wonder what else the printer can print?

 

Image Source and Links:

3d Printed Pizza – Video 

 

 

 

Cocoon – A Tiny Home Made of Fabric

Cocoon – A Tiny Home Made of Fabric

Tanya Shukstelinsky, who did a final project from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design created tiny shelter space that has gotten a lot of attention lately.  Her piece called  “Cocoon” is made out of fabric, and has a sleeping space, steps, a table, and a fillable bathtub within it.  In order to move around in the space, an inhabitants would have to grab onto the stitches inside.

The project was made to investigate creating a private space in a public area.  Shukstelinsky intended the space to be used in spaces in between other buildings, creating a solution for urban nomads and those needing temporary living space.

The space looks pretty cozy, and though it looks like just enough for one person, maybe a visitor could fit in the kitchen area.  Need a space to live?

References and Images:
dezeen

Links:

Tanya Chukstelinsky 

 

 

 

Bespoken – a Music Track created With Sounds from Bicycles

Bespoken – a Music Track created With Sounds from Bicycles

Noise art and sampled music have been around for a while, but composer Johnnyrandom  has done something interesting in regards to making musical compositions made only from everyday objects.  He has a music track called “Bespoken” which is created from the full potential of sounds that can be created generated from bicycles and their components.  In the online video, you see him hit the spokes with a mallet, put a guitar pick on the wheel as it spins, and watch as the sounds are being made.

The piece was made without synthesizers or samplers and the full work is available on Itunes.  If you like ambient music or bikes, this is worth a listen.

 

Links and Images:

Bespoken on vimeo 

johnnyrandom_ – Twitter 

 

 

 

The Green Wall – The Largest Leafy Wall in North America

The Green Wall – The Largest Leafy Wall in North America

A new sustainable interior wall at Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania has plants growing from floor to ceiling.  Called The Green Wall, the walls were designed to resemble a lush, green jungle and are 14 feet high and 300 feet long making it the largest green wall in North America.

The walls were developed by GSky and are comprised of 47,000 plants. The space has a greenhouse roof, and the walls are able to eliminate about 15,500 pounds of toxins and dust from the air within its location of the East Conservatory Plaza.  The walls are self-irrigated, and are a example of a sustainable interior.

If you want to check the walls out for yourself, head to the Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania.
Images and Links:

The Green Wall – longwoodgardens.org

longwoodgardens.org

 

 

 

EAT LOVE – A Book of Food Concepts by Eating Designer Marije Vogelzang

EAT LOVE – A Book of Food Concepts by Eating Designer Marije Vogelzang

Since 2000 Marije Vogelzang has been designing eating concept, and exploring the verb ‘to eat’.   Her work explores everything that surrounds the act of eating including atmosphere, the people involved, and the stories behind the ingredients.  The work will often explore the taste and texture, sound, smell and color of food and the way it is prepared and served.

Some of her work has explored the process of design of the travel of food to your body including “the journey of food from seed all the way to poop.”  Her work is developed in her studio and restaurant, and has evolved in the last ten years.

A new book called EAT LOVE, has won the award for Best Designed Cookbook of the Netherlands, and presents some of the research and projects of Vogelzang.  The book which has 160 pages  has images, personal stories, sketches, and designs.

I took a peek at the book website, and found there were some interesting projects featured in the book.

Some of pages include:

Cupcakes With a Lack of Attention (With pictures of cupcakes labeled with “no!,” “take me,” “come here,” “eat me,” “you can resist me,” and other messages.)
Cressware, Gardenware for the body (The designs include a watercress hat and cape.)
Funeral Dinner  (The phrase white food is suitable as “solace food,” is on the page with an image of white food on a table.)
The Binding Strength of Food (A large sculptural sausage structure, with a description about the artists’ process.)

I recommend getting a snack from the fridge, and checking out the book webpage, or ordering on Amazon.

 

Images and Links:

EAT LOVE – www.marijevogelzang.nl 

EAT Love – on www.amazon.com