View allAll Photos Tagged automaton
Colonial Display at the Belpre, Ohio Branch...we used this scene in the Marietta windows for 2 years.
Robot Mannequin with neon blue light visor and red fez hat - Tron Like android droid future robotic dummy ROM Space Knight machine automaton replicant Blade Runner monster Blonde Frankenstein golem cyclops killer robots droids movie film prop like fashion fiberglass wood plastic white blank Shriner Free Mason Masonic Gort The Day The Earth Stood Still cylon klaatu barada nikto
Outer case and dial of gold; partly enameled; set with paste jewels
Inner case of gold with a white enamel dial
By James Cox (1749 - 91)
English (London)
c. 1770
Item number: 1977.436.4
Warning: video may contain strobing images on some displays.
Having a look at Processing again, after a few years away, and I see it supports Python now, as well as JavaScript :)
This is a 'rock-paper-scissors' cellular automaton. Rock paper and scissors are shown as shades of gray.
Start with a small number of each cell type spread at random. Each cell plays against its 8 neighbours and spreads to any neighbours that it beats (or spreads unhindered into an empty cell).
The end result is the hypnotic spiral effect. Used ffmpeg to stitch into a video. Set frame rate to 16 fps as this seems to minimise any strobing effect.
More about how this works on Wikipedia
KidRobot Morbo Alien from Futurama Green - Space future - Bender android androids mechanical man men automaton metal toy toys gray cartoon animation TV television show futuristic robot Matt Groening David X Cohen kid robots cigars 2011 psychodelic trippy dragon wagon car Janus two face female elephant with flower and dragon crocodile alligator with unicorn horn Mattel Upsydownsy Upsy downsy
Steam powered Automaton #8
By Mike Boynton
If you are interested in purchasing this item please contact us at Drboynton@yahoo.com
Design on the concept of Cobra de Aco to lead the Cobra Battle-Android-Technicians, Troopers that are attached to The Bats Divisions .
Cobra Automaton is Android Replica of the fierce Cobra de Aco.
A technically interesting paper automaton in conjunction with a mini-marble machine. Designed by Keisuke Saka.
Doll, automaton, 1890-1900
This musical box has metal clockwork mechanisms that enable this doll's bisque head and hands to move.
[V&A Museum of Childhood]
A technically interesting paper automaton in conjunction with a mini-marble machine. Designed by Keisuke Saka. Download on Etsy.com/moving-paper-craft or DLmarket.
My modifications:
The axle I have bearing on both sides with a paper tube. The rear legs also move, connected with a bridge to the front legs.
An automaton of artist Yayoi Kusama in a Louis Vuitton window display on Fifth Avenue, NYC, for the Louis Vuitton/Kusama collaboration.
1/14, 2:47 a.m.: They turn the bot off at night, which disappoints me a bit. I walked right up to the window in hopes there was a motion sensor to activate it.
Celebrated for their rendition of The Steadfast Tin Soldier, the Musical Boy's impromptu performances are always met with a rapturous reception by the dwellers of the playroom, which will pause and listen spellbound to this master entertainer and storyteller's mellifluous voice.
This whole series of paintings - titled The Secret Life Of Toys - revolves around an imagined magical playroom, and is inspired by vintage toys, automatons and sweet memories of childhood. As a munchkin that loved dreaming up what my playthings were up to when I wasn't around, I am so happy to finally jot these flights of fancy down on canvas!
I created these for a 'painted editorial', featured in this month's La Petite Magazine (issue 6, pp. 58-63) , and after having ooh-ed and aah-ed for quite some time over their lovely publication, I was thrilled to be approached by them a while ago for a collaboration to be featured in their latest issue.I have been working on this project behind-the-scenes, and now that the magazine's current issue is released, I am so excited to be able to share this painted editorial with you!
This 'painted editorial' is now a fashion spread, and I must admit I had the loveliest of times working on this feature, especially since I got to style what each little cutie wears myself!
acrylics on canvas, 10 x 12 inch., 13 x 15 inch. framed
A small Darwin Day celebration of evolutionary processes.
Rendering based on a cellular automaton, where the state of each cell and the sum of its neighbors determines size, height and color. Of course, properly speaking there is no evolution happening here, just the implementation of a single rule. But this particular automaton does produce interesting substructures that remind me of phylogenetic trees.
Zoltar Speaks Fortune Teller Automaton - Telling Tarot Card Reading Gypsy Swami Man in Prognostication Booth Downtown East Village St Marks Place and 2nd Avenue crystal ball Zoltan Saint Street 2012 NYC 11/13/2012 New York City wax museum type machines robot robots android droid droids fortune teller turban
During the public opening period of the fairground arts Museum of Bercy, sound and light animation is offered several times each day in the Venetian salons, where automatons standing on balconies come to life in the spotlight of a moment of pure wonder.
Pendant la période d'ouverture du musée des arts forains de Bercy au grand public, une animation son et lumière est proposée à plusieurs reprises chaque jour dans les salons Vénitiens, où les automates postés sur les balcons prennent vie sous les projecteurs pour un moment de pur émerveillement.
In time, before Valentine's Day, "Rob Ives" has released this new paper model for download. www.robives.com/lovemachine I have varied some elements after assembling.
Constructed from 100 layers of antique illustrations, this is a self portrait that repeats endlessly. See peacoquette.com to purchase prints.
Jupiter 2 Space Ship from Lost In Space Metal the 1960s TV Show Television - series 1965 - 1968 science fiction sci-fi adventure Irwin Allen Space Family Robinson Future Danger Will Robinson android mechanical man automaton plastic windup toy toys metal miniature flying saucer
"Angst In My Pants" is a various artists compilation consisting of sixteen tracks by nine bands, spread across two 7" records. It was released on the Deleted label in 1980 and I bought it from them by mail order for the princely sum of £1.15 plus P&P. Deleted was formed by a band called The Instant Automatons (who contribute two of the tracks) and this was the label's second release. It was a limited edition of 500 and the catalogue number is DEP002.
I hadn't heard of any of the artists on "Angst In My Pants" prior to buying it and not much has been heard of them since. They offer up a wide variety of indie, post-punk, electronica and wackiness - and according to the sleeve notes "if you're looking for a common denominator it's something to do with all these people being friends of ours who've released music on video". The Instant Automatons continued to release music over the next few years, mainly on DIY cassettes. They also appeared on the flexi disc given away with issue 12 of Chainsaw fanzine....
Full tracklisting:
ANXIOUS SIDE
A1 The Instant Automatons - Restless Night
A2 The Instant Automatons – Scared To Be Alone
A3 The Door And The Window - CCH
BOISTEROUS SIDE
B1 Mic Woods – Cracked Actor?
B2 Mic Woods – Weekday Lovecrush
B3 The Midnight Circus – Silicone Baby
B4 The Midnight Circus – The Hedonist Jive
CURIOUS SIDE
C1 The 012 – 9 To 5
C2 The 012 – In The Ghetto
C3 The Digital Dinosaurs – The Sideways Man
C4 Lily Malone & Angus McSteering-Wheel – No Got Champagne
DEVIOUS SIDE
D1 Colin Potter – Is It You Is It Me?
D2 Colin Potter – I Am Your Shadow
D3 Colin Potter – Quick One
D4 Missing Persons – The Blue-Eyed Boy Addresses Himself To The Matter In Hand
D5 Missing Persons – Angst In My Pants
Doll: Mythdoll Leroi
Steampunk automaton mod; concept and photos by me, paint and extras sculpted by my friend, Angela P.
Poster advertising Professor Faber’s talking machine, exhibited by P.T. Barnum during 1873 in his museum. The automaton was the first talking figure. From the Harry Houdini Collection.
In 1846, a German astronomer living in The United States named Joseph Faber unveiled his cutting-edge Euphonia at London’s Egyptian Hall, having accompanied P.T. Barnum across the Atlantic. Faber had spent the previous seventeen years perfecting this remarkable oddity, and had even dashed an earlier machine to bits out of frustration after American audiences failed to pay him much attention. A complex device controlled by seventeen levers, a bellows, and a telegraphic line, this machine was adorned with the movable replica of a human face, which was able to faithfully replicate the sounds of human speech. At the exhibition, Faber made the Euphonia sing a haunting rendition of “God Save the Queen.” [Source: irrationalgeographic.wordpress.com/2009/06/24/joseph-fabe...]