Architectural Desing Lab 1

FABRICA - Applied Arts and Communications Research Center
Hi everybody! after summer vacations, we are back with the next appointment of our Workshop Program:Aaron Siegel, Head of Fabrica Interaction and Online Experience, will hold a three-day workshop at Fabrica from September 26th to 28th, 2012. Participation is free and open to a maximum of 10 external participants, selected by review of CV and portfolio that must be emailed by September 10th to both omar.vulpinari@fabrica.it and aaron.siegel@fabrica.it. Lunch and facilities included. Workshop briefMaking visible the invisible: data in art and designData is ubiquitous. Everything we do in life generates data.Data comes in many forms. It’s not always quantifiable or easy to measure.Data is important. Understanding the data generated by various activities informs our decisions about them.We will be covering the historical use of data within art and design, the many forms that data comes in, as well as the many ways data can be represented.Aaron Siegel BiographyAaron Siegel is a transdisciplinarian with a concentration in computational information design. He received his MFA in Design|Media Art from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2008. His work utilizes data visualization to address complex systems and display relationships and correlations that would remain unseen from any other perspective.He has worked for various institutions including UCLA, NASA JPL, Electroland, and the MIT SENSEable City Laboratory.
 — at Fabrica.


Hi everybody! 

after summer vacations, we are back with the next appointment of our Workshop Program:

Aaron Siegel, Head of Fabrica Interaction and Online Experience, will hold a three-day workshop at Fabrica from September 26th to 28th, 2012. Participation is free and open to a maximum of 10 external participants, selected by review of CV and portfolio that must be emailed by September 10th to both omar.vulpinari@fabrica.it and aaron.siegel@fabrica.it. 
Lunch and facilities included. 

Workshop brief
Making visible the invisible: data in art and design

Data is ubiquitous. Everything we do in life generates data.
Data comes in many forms. It’s not always quantifiable or easy to measure.
Data is important. Understanding the data generated by various activities informs our decisions about them.
We will be covering the historical use of data within art and design, the many forms that data comes in, as well as the many ways data can be represented.

Aaron Siegel Biography
Aaron Siegel is a transdisciplinarian with a concentration in computational information design. He received his MFA in Design|Media Art from the University of California, Los Angeles in 2008. His work utilizes data visualization to address complex systems and display relationships and correlations that would remain unseen from any other perspective.
He has worked for various institutions including UCLA, NASA JPL, Electroland, and the MIT SENSEable City Laboratory.
— at Fabrica.






Studying daily lights…

some random photos 

Random sequence of previous model on 1:500 ….

now, Let’s go straight to number one! 

Quay Brothers - 1984 - The cabinet of Jan Svankmajer (di workinregress)

Bike tour on 30 of May! share and come with your friends!

Espèces d’espaces

Specie di spazi

Species of spaces and other pieces


by Georges Perec 

Amazing bOOk!

plans

plans