Flush
“Flush” is an interactive sculpture that attempts to display the flesh of a head, unfolded and exposing all angles. The flesh becomes embarrassed in the presence of a viewer. The output is a physical sculpture, created from a computer-generated map. The map is a projection onto the physical sculpture, revealing the technology behind the flesh, only visible as the viewer moves.
A human sized 5 x 7 dot-matrix display becomes a climbing wall. The individual display dots protrude from the wall and thus form steps and handles to allow the climber to hold on to the display. However, if one uses an unilluminated dot, this dot will cave in, causing the climber to slip and to tumble to the ground. Prior to climbing the display one has to memorise a continuous series of letters, as this is the only way to change the dots one is holding on to in time for the next change of letters. In doing so one can key into a terminal a short sentence. Whoever manages to hold onto the display the longest is the winner. The longer one holds on to the display the quicker the change of letters.
Digital Grafitti
Digital Graffiti - Spray Demo from Martin Rädlinger on Vimeo.
Early demo:
Digital Spraycan - Early Demo from Martin Rädlinger on Vimeo.
Via here.



