Artist Lab Matthew Gardiner

Artist Lab Matthew Gardiner

Research Through Teaching
Research by Making
Fold Printing
Fold Mapping

The artist lab Matthew Gardiner presented project outcomes to-date for the ORI* project. The following is information from the Ars Electronica Festival website: https://ars.electronica.art/radicalatoms/en/artist-lab-matthew-gardiner/

The ORI*lab Masterclass was also run during the same presentation.

Thu 8 September - 12 September 2016 10AM-7:30 PM
STARTS Labs, POSTCITY, Linz, Austria



Our research begins with the premise: folding is coding for matter, an idea emerging from computer and molecular science, pointing to the idea that materials perform computation and ORI*, is a functional aesthetic way to sense, program and transform the code of matter.

For the Ars Electronica 2016, we present our vision for ORI*:

Niwashi—our interactive fabrication system: 3D scanned forms are algorithmically folded, then 3D printed with foldable material composites. Niwashi means “landscaper,” a role held by an accomplished master of nature and art. Combined with elastomers, these ready-foldable objects express high degrees of programmability and transformability.

ORI*BIT—our for the minimum building-block module for ORI* Systems: conceived as a foldable actuator and haptic sensor combined. Conceptually, an ORI*BIT, could be used to make an ORI*BOT, a more complex folded organism. ORI* includes the asterisk to express multiple domains of application, medium and scale; ORI* explores folding as a language to combine functional and aesthetic design for daily life.

Credits: Matthew Gardiner, Hideaki Ogawa, Roland Aigner, Rachel Hanlon, Erwin Reitböck and Ray Gardiner. Special thanks to Christopher Lindinger, Horst Hörtner and Benjamin Krux at Reprap Austria

This project is funded through the FWF PEEK Program and a research project of the Ars Electronica Futurelab.



Artist Lab Matthew Gardiner

Our research begins with the premise: folding is coding for matter, an idea emerging from computer and molecular science, pointing to the idea that materials perform computation and ORI*, is a functional aesthetic way to sense, program and transform the code of matter.

We acknowledge the Wuthaurong people on whose lands we live and work. Sovereignty was never ceded and we pay our respect to past, present, and future Aboriginal elders and community, and to their long and rich history of artmaking on this Country.

Stuff you can buy from Matthew Gardiner