Seifert Surface (aka Henry Segerman), a mathematician and also a bodacious creator of both virtual and real math-inspired art, is doing so many new and fun things that I had to get out of my blogging funk long enough to post this.
Three years ago, and over on his New World Notes blog, Hamlet Au did a great write-up on Seifert's recreation of Robert A. Heinlein's fictional "Crooked House" in Second Life, a house shaped like the unfolded net of a tesseract. "--And He Built a Crooked House" is a scifi short story about a mathematically inclined architect who "has what he thinks is a brilliant idea to save on real estate costs."
Now Seifert has shot two videos in-world so that even non-Second Life'rs can have a look and understand what it's like to walk inside it. It's 'the awesome,' don't you think?
And just in time for Christmas shopping, eight of Seifert's math-inspired investigations and sculptures have come to life, thanks to Shapeways' 3D printing. I'm buying as soon as I finish this blogpost.
Sphere Autoglyph
Torus Autoglyph
Prices range from $12.95 to $57.29.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Seifert Surface breathes (real) life into virtual content
Posted by Bettina Tizzy at 8:29 AM
Labels: 3D printing, architecture, crooked house, Henry Segerman, mathematically-based art, Robert A. Heinlein, Second Life, Seifert Surface, Shapeways
1 comments:
These 3D prints are so cool! I have an SL version of Seifert's Torus Autoglyph, one of my oldest SL possessions. Very tempted to grab a RL version as well. :)
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