cassie-final

DNA Design

For my final project, I aimed to experiment in slit-scanning. At first I was planning to use it to make a portrait series of my friend Julie and her extravagant clothes, but since the virus stopped us from seeing each other, I decided to make a self portrait series instead. As I experimented with my rotation mechanism (see details below), I realized my images resemble the helical shape of DNA. Combining the two ideas, if I had the ability to design my DNA, these images depict what I would want the sequences of my most important traits to look like.

RESOURCEFULNESS, DRIVE

This is a roll of Scotch tape, and this image is the epitome of this project — it illustrates my ability to accomplish my goal for this project despite the awful situation we’re in. As I have explained below, I created an entirely automatic rotation machine out of Arduino materials I happened to have in my closet, cardboard from all the boxes of groceries we’ve ordered, a Lazy Susan from my spice cabinet, corks from wine bottles, Scotch tape and a lot else, in order to pursue my visions for this project. I’ve always been this way: whenever there’s a problem, I set out to fix it in any way.

 

CURIOSITY, SPIRITUALITY

This is a glass clock. I grew up interested in a myriad of subjects, and one of my all time favorite fascinations is theoretical physics and the concept of dimensions and spacetime. I was recently writing a final paper for another class about the fourth dimension, and when she was in the room I asked my mom if she though time was another dimension. It led to an incredibly passionate conversation about our philosophies of life, religion, and spirituality, which I have only recently begun to understand for myself, and I connected with her an an entirely different level. The mixing of time and space is an idea that fascinates my entire family, and is becoming one of the main explorations in my art practice.

 

EMPATHY

These are cooking utensils, which represent, more literally, my family’s love for food, but also my devotion to love in general, which I learned from food. Every evening growing up, my family would sit down to a home-cooked dinner together, dropping our electronics, homework, or whatever else we were working on, and come together to eat and discuss our days and anything exciting (or depressing) that was going on in the world. Even if I didn’t know it until recently, this has been one of the most defining aspects of my life. Dinner is where I learned how to be polite and listen, make eloquent conversation, and understand and appreciate love. I am so grateful that this is how my family brought me up, and I plan to do the same with my own children someday.

 

CONFIDENCE

This is my wide-tooth hair comb, designed specifically for curly hair. Over the last few years, I’ve come to love my curly hair — and I used to really hate it. At the same time, my love for other aspects of myself, my abilities, and my decisions has also increased. I find that since coming to college and being even more independent than I was before it, I’m becoming more and more fearless. I know what I want, and I’m not afraid to ask for it. I think my hair was the key to my internal freedom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

MELOMANIAC

This one is a combination of music materials, including headphones, a guitar pick, and a mini amp. This aspect of me isn’t very deep — I just love music. I listen to and play it all the time. Plus it especially connects me to my dad.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rotation Mechanism

Unfortunately, one of the bigger goals of this project, creating 3D models with photogrammetry, I was not able to achieve. I wanted to take slit-scans of the objects like I did above, but from multiple angles, to see if I could stitch them together in three dimensions. I’m not sure if my computer isn’t  strong enough to see any depth (my computer crashed every 4 out of 5 tries) or this is just completely impossible to do, but after many many attempts, it never worked properly. However, two good things came out of my attempts. First, some cool GIFs of what the 3D models could potentially look like:

Second, what I predicted would be tricky about doing photogrammetry with these rotating images is that the rotation speed, starting position, and ending position all have to be constant or else the photos won’t look like they’re from the same “object” and the photogrammetry software won’t find any similar landmarks. I had to find a way to automate the process.

When I first started, I was looking for something in my house that spun smoothly. I found a little Lazy Susan in my spice cabinet and attached a string to the side, which I pulled to make it rotate. This was effective for a minute, but I quickly realized it’s impossible for a human to pull the string with a constant force, so the coils in my images would never be perfect without a machine. I needed to motorize the Lazy Susan.

Luckily, I had a bunch of Arduino pieces and cardboard lying around, so I sought out to do just that. It look a while; there was a lot of trial and error. Here’s a bit of documentation from the process.

Details

And it was successful! All the five images in the DNA series were made with my machine instead of by hand, making my image-making process super easy. I could focus a lot more on the composition of my rotating sculptures instead of futzing with the Lazy Susan. And if my laptop ever works, it would definitely be an effective device to do slit-scanning photogrammetry.

Sean Leo – Final

Here & There

Here & There is small series of scenes depicting domesticity during quarantine. The avatars in the scenes embody the hope, dream, and opportunity of other places, speeding through locales that contrast to the stillness and current constraints of home life.

Using a Kinect Sensor, TouchDesigner (a visual programming language), and access to IP Cams I built a system that transformed a person to become a mediated avatar, that through it’s body displayed other parts of the world.

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This project has taken a few turns – I originally pitched a sort of digital camera obscura effect that would use the motions of my body in my space to digitally reveal other places; think body paintbrush. What I attempted to build was a system that would use layers of feedback on top of itself while still clearly being able to see each layer. I had hoped the use of a projector would aide in the layering effect allowing most of the visual content to conform to the geometry of my room. Unfortunately TouchDesigner does not support projector output on the free license.

Original Pitch fig.1
Original Pitch fig.2

 

feedback testing
feedback layer testing
A very complicated network

The next iteration was to focus more on the computer vision aspect of the piece and implement hand tracking that I would be able to paint objects surfaces in my room that would reveal portals to other places. The triggering and isolation specific content proved difficult, was working on gesture recognition in TD that would trigger the effect on whether my hand was open or closed. I am confident with more time and development I still could realize this system.

This led to the current incarnation that flipped the layers. Instead of layering behind my body I opted to cover my body entirely rendering myself something entirely mediated.

Final iteration of network
Screenshot of IP Cam
Screenshot of IP Cam

Further work on this project would expand the series to stage more scenes, as well develop a more fool proof overlay of the body and limit artifact.

This project was the first time I worked with the Kinect sensor and much of the R&D was seeing what could be accomplished in TD and how best to maniuplate the sensor data. There are countless of things to explore with it and Im excited to see what else I can build with it and continue to build off this project.

 

Light painting + Reflective Photograms

This past weekend in my normal scroll of the internet I happened upon a post by Philippe Dubost (@philou.cc) who has been posting shots using light painting with a pixel stick to write phrases in Montreal.

He has also posted a video tutorial on how to create the same effect using TouchDesigner.

So I set it up and my girlfriend and I spent some time playing around the apartment drawing with phones and flashlights. What became interesting was that since it was looking for the brightest spot, a reflection  on a wall would also trigger the feeback/line to continue.

We than started painting our faces with light, with led to using the flash of a camera to imprint a silhouetted reflection.

I realized that doing this was the inverse of what photograms were. Rather creating exposures by blocking light, this process was producing similar effects by reflecting light.