CST week 10

Suzanne: “So here’s the thing. He wants to buy you guys out. He doesn’t want the ride or the town. He just wants- I don’t know- the creativity. The PR win. He wants peace. And the real news is. he’s over the barrel. Freddy’s forcing his hand. If we can make that problem go away, we can ask for anything…” (Doctorow 388)

“I met a man a couple of weeks ago who had dreadlocks down to his knees, shredded jeans, and a leather jacket with amazing etchings all over it. I went over to see what he was working on and discovered another accidental entrepreneur.” (Hatch, 195).

This quote represents the relationship between technology and capitalism and how the two fuel each other. We, this class, are participants in this relationship. An example of this is purely the texts we read each week. One, an entrepreneurs perspective on the makers movement and how it changing small business opportunity and the other, a creative science fiction novel that spans time and character narrative moralities to flush out the tension in the makers movement with capitalism. This quote touches on creativity as currency, and the appearance of power in public sphere, all of which can be seen in modern company models (Makerbot, Apple, etc). As Hatch awkwardly points out, even someone who wears shredded jeans can do it! (?) I found this quote in the Makers Manifesto to represent the underlying voice of condescension mixed with And-You-Can-Too! that Hatch has describing creative innovation in the tech world. In our own microcosm of technology and creativity in Making Meaning Matter we have to navigate artistic landscapes, while attempting to create something purposeful, with innovation in technology and design. This has created quite a transposition between conversation in ‘the real world’ the Evergreen microcosm, and the various personalities of the class.

4th Iteration-figurine


IMG_1240My Blue Rabbit project is like something
out of a twisted feminist sci-fi dream. I wanted to bring self-portraiture and virtual reality/identity together to create a model of myself that in theory was born out of my virtual presence on social media. Imagine the attributes of your facebook, okcupid, etc. coming to life, being born through the 3D printer womb and living as you. Obviously, with out imagination, this project does not work. The reality is a 5 inch figurine that is inanimate, essentially faceless, and perhaps even boring. The use of film to ‘animate’ or bring to life this plastic self image is key to sharing this idea quickly and creatively to an outside audience. I considered many options on how to portray her voice, her personhood. Should I speak using my voice? Should I use a robots voice reading text I wrote? Should I use text, silent and open to interpretation?


IMG_1235 IMG_1221 IMG_1217My 3D ‘replica’ is 154mm (6 inches) tall, 69mm wide, and 66mm deep. My RL body is 1,676.4mm tall. ‘She’ is made of 33g of plastic filament compared to my 56699g of ‘natural’ filament. It took ‘her’ 6 hours to print, where as my mother was in labor with me for 12.

Designing myself was easy. I stood in front of a scanner. I played with positions of my arms, and my posture, which at that moment seemed so incredibly important. I was constrained in movement and detail. My posture would forever be cast into plastic, representing me in form as slightly more than an amorphous white blob. My arms had to stay fixed at my sides or at least have my hands attaching somewhere. My legs are also fixed, immobile and in Tinkercad became rooted to a cylindrical platform to allow my replica to stand on her own, to have a platform, literally.   I chose a white filament to catch lights and show shadow and texture. I considered painting ‘her’ but decided it would take away from the raw machine made feel it had.

After her lead role in Cyborga, my 3D model will most likely retire to a shelf in my house a souvenir of exploring my relationship with my virtual self. Her legacy will live on in my future work exploring the intersection of feminism, identity, and technology through art.

week 8 CST

“Death was used to drawing stares even before he became a cyborg with a beautiful woman beside him, but this was different” (Doctorow, 339).

Speaking of cyborgs and stares… I wanted to make my cyborg have movable limps to bring more life to ‘her’ movements. John and I designed a socket attachments that would allow the arms and legs to move. We also found an already proven, similar model on tinkercad. We pulled the arms and legs off of my virtual body which was creepy and fascinating.

3rd Iteration photo: Cyborgs humans animals time

Capture

What is the relationship between human, machine, and animal in terms of cyberfeminism?haraway

This image is a created based on Donna Haraways Cyborg Manifesto. The connection of animal to human to machine- natural/non-natural, work to create a kind of self portrait, as my project itself is a form of self-portraiture.

oldwest

As I extend myself into future, upload download manipulate and reproduce, I look to the past. I grew up in Arizona, the desert, on disputed land, on stolen land. A photograph from the Archived west, white men-Troop C, 5th Calvary to be exact, who arrested boomers and squatters prior to opening of Oklahoma, no mention of the role of the black woman- or of course the cyborg and white woman from 2014.

Troop`C,’ 5th Cavalry, which arrested boomers and squatters prior to opening of Oklahoma, ca. 1888. 111-SC-87369.

cyborg

Cyborg. 2012. http://konspektikaust.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/cyborg.jpgmoveselfchem

 

Personal photograph by author. 2014. By Lauren Steury.

Black and white medium format photography. What is it like to move like a cyborg, to be a cyborg? to be a woman? to move in space and light?

 

_MG_1042 copy

Personal photograph by author. 2014. By Lauren Steury.

A joke, of sorts.

woman-gif

Woman Shots. N.d. Josh’s Awesome 3D Blog of Awesomeness. Web. 18 Nov. 2014output_KbnTgm

Recreating the 3D woman. Lauren Steury. 2014.

 

http://vimeo.com/112213157

CST 7

SandhillCrane_MatingDance_6908

“Our competitors don’t want to compete with us on a level playing feild. They are, more than anything, imitators… There’s no attention to detail. There’s no attention to safety! It’s all cowboys and gypsies” (Doctorow, 262).  -Sammy

 

 

Mating Ritual or 3D Scan?

 

Steph brings up the politics of 3D scanning. Representation and agency of a body that we lose control over once its uploaded to the web, but gain the ability to manipulate and distort the body? Zev is unmoved. He volunteers to be scanned and in what appears to be some sort of mating dance (from an alien perspective) leads to the production of a virtual Zev body, that could be birthed through the womb of 3D printer. Reproduction in its most abiotic form.

Movement making

Black and White 120 film hand processed/ self portrait/ movement, motion, and three dimensional explorationswalk spill output_KbnTgm moveself moosh jump chem bount

Reclaiming the 360

output_KbnTgm

 

What does it mean? Why does it matter!

Well, thinking about my three dimensional self in technology, and taking that into my work as a photographer, I made an animated gif of myself using an old mimiya camera (see below) and 120mm film. Our class has been questioning the difference between 3D scan and photography as forms of technology that interfere (good or bad) with identity representation and of course the objectifying gaze.

acpeFrjr woman-gif

3RB67

CST week 6

uncle-sam-oss

 

“It was telling the story he know, of growing up with an indefinable need to be different to reject the mainstream and to embrace this subculture and aesthetic” Doctorow 289

“Another of my favorite DARPA projects is the Adaptive Vehicle Make program. This is an experiment in creating a new way to develop vehicle platforms for the military by crowdsourcing the design and then using a distributed manufacturing facility to build them. It actually worked.” Hatch 159

 

I like to imagine us (us as in Evergreen students, us an in radical reject creative folk, us who grew up with the need to be different to reject mainstream, us who embrace this subculture) as the kind of ‘kids’ who would  take Perry and Lesters ride into our own hands to create something. In reality there is us (us the American population, us the American right, us the patriot, us the war monger, us the capitalists) who open source create a “military vehicle” as Hatch puts it, which is a drone. A DRONE. Not (1.) a low humming sound, not (2.) a male bee in a colony of social bees, which does no work but can fertilize a queen, a person who does no useful work and lives off others but (3.)  a killing machine. A remote controlled weapon of war used to kill people. That is what we (USA) have so thoughtfully contributed to opensource.


But really:
“That definition fits a $140 million Global Hawk drone, circling over Afghanistan and transmitting video to Air Force intelligence analysts in California. But it also describes the $500 foam plane that my children fly on weekends. Both have sophisticated computer autopilots, high-resolution cameras (we’re partial to GoPros), wireless data connections for video and telemetry, ground stations with heads-up displays and real-time video (my kids were disappointed at a recent tour of the Oshkosh air show to see that today’s military drone pilots have worse ground stations than they do), step-by-step mission scripting, and the capability to play back footage of the mission in full” -Anderson

See more:
How I Accidentally Kickstarted the Domestic Drone Boomhttp://www.wired.com/2012/06/ff_drones/all/