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Our friends Geo Monley and Brandon Onstott are making a porthole for the Time Machine we’re creating at Pataphysical Studios, with a world-class team of of artists, makers, engineers and multimedia innovators. This interactive art exhibit will invite you to travel through time and meet characters from the past, present and future.
Geo and Brandon are building this porthole at Tam Makers, our community makerspace, where they can use a wider range of tools, from Autocad 360 to laser cutter or CNC rounter. The design is similar to the iris used in cameras, which let you open and close a circular very elegantly.
Our guests will be invited to open these portholes as part of their time travel experience, to interact with characters and articfacts from different times.
It’s great to see different teams come together to design and build the various parts of our Time Machine. That’s what collective art projects are all about!
View more photos of our work in progress on the Time Machine:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/sets/72157659761749014
Watch our 3D fly through video of the Time Machine:
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
Learn more about Pataphysical Studios:
This Time Machine is the clock that is fun to watch.
Just turn it on, and its precise synchronous motor transfers a ball every sixty seconds for perfect time keeping.
The first and second tracks display the minutes and the lower track displays the hour.
This year, we are creating a Time Machine in our Maker Art class at the Lycée Français, with a great team of of 9 students. In our after-school workshop, we combine arts and technology to bring their ideas to life, with lights, sounds and motion.
Each student will create their own scene from the past, present or future. They will then work in teams to build the Time Machine, which will showcase their work -- as well as program lights, motion and sound with Arduino boards.
This class is for students in grades 4 and 5 (ages 8 to 10). Besides learning how to make things with electronics, this course helps them develop their creativity, collaboration and problem-solving skills. We meet in Sausalito for an hour and a half each week, every Thursday at 3:30pm, from January 5 to March 30, 2017.
Our teacher associate this year is Edward Janne, a talented maker, designer and engineer from our Tam Makers community. We’re very lucky to have his technical expertise for this new adventure. :)
We look forward to another great Maker Art course this year. We have a really good group of students, who are exceptionally creative and engaged. I can’t wait to see what they come up with!
View more photos about this Maker Art class at the Lycée:
bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-photos
Learn more about our Time Machine class at the Lycée:
bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017
To learn more about our Maker Art programs, visit this page:
We presented our Time Machine at Marinovators 2017, an annual showcase for young makers in Marin County.
Our Time Machine was created by the Maker Art class taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. Our 4th and 5th graders designed and built their own scenes from the past, present and future -- from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century. This interactive art exhibit combines art, technology and storytelling -- using Arduino, motions, lights and sounds.
Many of our students and their parents were on hand to demonstrate this innovative after-school project to dozens of visitors of all ages. Everyone seemed to enjoy their experience, and it was a great opportunity for the kids to get the recognition they deserve. This innovative after-school project helps children develop their creative and collaborative skills -- and the confidence that they can help change the world.
We hosted this exhibit with Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley, where many of the artifacts for the Time Machine were fabricated, based on the children’s designs. We also invited visitors to make their own Tam Makers badges with LEDs, laser cut shapes, and color markers. They created some ingenious badges, and wore them proudly at the show.
It was a great way to celebrate art and science and encourage children to build a better world.
Marinovators took place on Saturday, April 22, from 10am to 3pm, at the College of Marin in Kentfield. Our Tam Makers booth was in Room #245 in the new Academic Center.
Learn more about our Time Machine: bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017
Learn more about our Maker Art classes: fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/
Learn more about Marinovators: marinovators.org/
Each Saturday, the good doctors make art together at Pataphysical Studios.
Here are this week’s notable art projects:
• Drs. Really and Rindbrain created a banner for an art protest, ‘Traffic Jam Valley’
• Dr. Rindbrain developed ‘Magical Thought’, an illuminated wonderbox
• Dr. Fiske dropped by to record an impromptu video of Pataphysical Studios
• Dr. Figurine showed off the head and body of her Owl for our Dada Exhibit
• Dr. Fabio presented composite sketches for the Time Machine, based on team designs
• Dr. Truly demonstrated how to share videos on social media while lying flat on your back
• Dr. Canard discussed her Dada Mobile with Dr. Zboon, who then created a greeting card
• Dr. Fabio showed off a new circle design for the Crazy Clock, discarding its old frame
We then went on a nice walk to Oakwood Valley. On the way, Dr. Rindbrain re-discovered himself and nearby dimensions on a neighborhood pole. We then played in a secret grove of bay trees, deep in the heart of the valley.
Vive la ‘patpahysique!
View more 'Pataphysical photos: www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157623637793277
About Traffic Jam Valley:
www.marinij.com/general-news/20160711/for-tam-valley-driv...
About the Crazy Clock:
docs.google.com/document/d/18h8uK5v-H3fvonbvJaTYOyvuiDDfv...
About the Time Machine:
docs.google.com/document/d/1rM9kjOu83Qewh1HwaA2nkzbGdmHb9...
About Pataphysical Studios: pataphysics.us/
Time travel has always been a dream for physicists, a recurring theme for sci-fi.
After years of work, failed prototypes and draining money fundings, a group of danish physicists has achieved to build a time machine.
Sadly, this model isn't bidirectional despite being based upon Ronald Mallet's work (his time machine would send time travellers back and forth in time but never to a moment before turning the machine on).
This version only allows people to be sent to the future and the amount of time would have to be considered for each individual.
The process involves 4 steps, each one of them consisting on the intake of a special fluid. Once completed, the traveler would pass out to the next morning, thus traveling forward in time a few hours.
do you like ? become a fan : Facebook Cyber Factory
enjoy our girls collection : sexy party babes
past & future editions : nightmare 2012 2011 2008 2006
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Red Banjo Saloon circa 1960.
To learn more about Park City's fascinating history visit parkcityhistory.org or swing by the Park City Museum at 528 Main Street. #pctimemachine
For questions or comments about this installation email pctimemachine@yahoo.com.
This is a private project for a class at the University of Utah. The city of Park City and the Park City Museum are not responsible for the placement or content of the QR codes.
The Dreamer’s illuminated sculpture channels free spirits like physicist Albert Einstein and activist Greta Thunberg, speaking to us from across space and time. Their faces appear on an translucent mask through the magic of rear-projected video, which brings them to life as if they were right in front of you.
The Dreamer’s face keeps transforming, showing fleeting characters and images, evoking memories and ideas that can move us and transform our lives. My goal for this art project is to make us more aware of how characters like these can influence us and change the way we perceive the world around us.
This photo set documents the making of the Dreamer in winter 2019, when I built a frame, a projection stand, backdrop and carousel for the Dreamer, with the gracious help of Geo Monley and friends at Tam Makers. The Dreamer’s flat face started as a paper clay sculpture mold, vacuum-formed over a plastic cast, upon which we rear-project videos of talking heads from found footage, edited and transformed to fit in the shape of our masks.
The effect is surreal, and this art piece seems to be breaking new ground. There are so many ways it can go now. Next steps include adding some interactivity, so you can query the spirits or spark different moods -- as well as filming and acquiring more talking head videos. I would like to present The Dreamer as a stand-alone kiosk in art exhibits, as well as in the Time Machine we are building at Pataphysical Studios.
See more photos in this Dreamer album: www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157674887503188
Learn more about the Dreamer: fabriceflorin.com/2018/10/25/dreamer
Learn about the Time Machine: pataphysics.us/time-machine/
Elk's Lodge, 1978.
To learn more about Park City's fascinating history visit parkcityhistory.org or swing by the Park City Museum at 528 Main Street. #pctimemachine
For questions or comments about this installation email pctimemachine@yahoo.com.
This is a private project for a class at the University of Utah. The city of Park City and the Park City Museum are not responsible for the placement or content of the QR codes.
Rush Setlist for Time Machine Tour at Jiffy Lube Live, Bristow, VA:
Set One
The Spirit Of Radio
Time Stand Still
Presto
Stick It Out
Workin' Them Angels
Leave That Thing Alone
Faithless
BU2B
Freewill
Marathon
Subdivisions
Set Two
Tom Sawyer
Red Barchetta
YYZ
Limelight
The Camera Eye
Witch Hunt
Vital Signs
Caravan
Drum Solo
Closer To The Heart
2112 Part I: Overture
2112 Part II: The Temples Of Syrinx
Far Cry
Encore:
La Villa Strangiato
Working Man
do you like ? become a fan : Facebook Cyber Factory
enjoy our girls collection : sexy party babes
past & future editions : nightmare 2012 2011 2008 2006
our next photoshoots : Cyber Factory party agenda
This year, we are creating a Time Machine at Pataphysical Studios, with a world-class team of of artists, makers, engineers and multimedia innovators.
This interactive art exhibit invites you to travel through time and meet characters from the past, present and future. We hope to intrigue, enchant and engage visitors in a playful experience that combines interactive art, multimedia theater and technology.
These first designs illustrate the experience we are creating. We will invite our guests to go through a short interactive ritual during their visit: walk around the exhibit, step into a magic portal, pick a time to visit, travel to that time, meet its characters and return back to the present.
This is the most complex art project we have ever created together. We are now working in teams to design and build different parts of the Time Machine, making interactive art with lights, sound and motion powered by Arduino and Raspberry Pi -- as well as producing short videos of the different times you will travel to.
We're all excited about our next collective art project and can’t wait to see what it will look like in a year!
View more photos of our work in progress on the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-photo-album
Watch our 3D fly through video of the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-video-3d-model-1
Read our design spec for the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-design-spec
View our design slides for the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-design-slides
Learn more about Pataphysical Studios:
2 time machines? No wonder I see cracks on my wall. This encounter could create a time paradox, the results of which could cause a chain reaction that would unravel the very fabric of the space-time continuum and destroy the entire universe... or that's just cracks after all. 😶~
We presented our Time Machine at Marinovators 2017, an annual showcase for young makers in Marin County.
Our Time Machine was created by the Maker Art class taught by Fabrice Florin and Edward Janne at the Lycée Français in Sausalito in winter 2017. Our 4th and 5th graders designed and built their own scenes from the past, present and future -- from the age of dinosaurs to the 50th century. This interactive art exhibit combines art, technology and storytelling -- using Arduino, motions, lights and sounds.
Many of our students and their parents were on hand to demonstrate this innovative after-school project to dozens of visitors of all ages. Everyone seemed to enjoy their experience, and it was a great opportunity for the kids to get the recognition they deserve. This innovative after-school project helps children develop their creative and collaborative skills -- and the confidence that they can help change the world.
We hosted this exhibit with Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley, where many of the artifacts for the Time Machine were fabricated, based on the children’s designs. We also invited visitors to make their own Tam Makers badges with LEDs, laser cut shapes, and color markers. They created some ingenious badges, and wore them proudly at the show.
It was a great way to celebrate art and science and encourage children to build a better world.
Marinovators took place on Saturday, April 22, from 10am to 3pm, at the College of Marin in Kentfield. Our Tam Makers booth was in Room #245 in the new Academic Center.
Learn more about our Time Machine: bit.ly/time-machine-lycee-2017
Learn more about our Maker Art classes: fabriceflorin.com/2016/02/14/teaching-maker-art/
Learn more about Tam Makers: www.tammakers.org/
Learn more about Marinovators: marinovators.org/
This year, we are creating a Time Machine at Pataphysical Studios, with a world-class team of of artists, makers, engineers and multimedia innovators.
This interactive art exhibit invites you to travel through time and meet characters from the past, present and future. We hope to intrigue, enchant and engage visitors in a playful experience that combines interactive art, multimedia theater and technology.
These first designs illustrate the experience we are creating. We will invite our guests to go through a short interactive ritual during their visit: walk around the exhibit, step into a magic portal, pick a time to visit, travel to that time, meet its characters and return back to the present.
This is the most complex art project we have ever created together. We are now working in teams to design and build different parts of the Time Machine, making interactive art with lights, sound and motion powered by Arduino and Raspberry Pi -- as well as producing short videos of the different times you will travel to.
We're all excited about our next collective art project and can’t wait to see what it will look like in a year!
View more photos of our work in progress on the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-photo-album
Watch our 3D fly through video of the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-video-3d-model-1
Read our design spec for the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-design-spec
View our design slides for the Time Machine:
bit.ly/time-machine-design-slides
Learn more about Pataphysical Studios:
pooh, in his time machine suit specially designed to repel cosmic rays, levitating "david blaine" style. Seen here proving the success of our initial time machine beta test (people in the future can levitate at will).
I should get round to uploading some actual photographs, but in the mean time, this is definately where you should be tomorrow night (if you're in Brighton)
A 13.35" tall doll's steamer trunk provides the wooden box to which everything is attached (mostly by screws).
Part of my 365 project. One picture of Star Wars stormtrooper action figures a day: trooperpatrol.tumblr.com/