Lecture 4: Project development (2) Storytelling
Lecture 3 and 4 will be a gateway to your own project development by bridging the previous learning with projects with specific themes: drawing and storytelling. By trying out small-scale projects with the context and examples given, inspiration for future work can be drawn.
- Storytelling with linkages
- Project examples
- Mimicking behaviors
- Read/watch
- Exercises
- Slides
Storytelling with linkages
Mechanical movement has been used in puppeteering since ancient times. Actually, the movements of human beings, animals and some familiar objects in everyday life are based on the linkage mechanism or can be mimicked by it. The most typical example is cartoonish kinetic sculpture, automata.
Puppets and mechanical characters
Linkage mechanisms were often used to animate puppets and replicas of humans or animals for entertainment. Recently, there is also research that tries to develop computer-aided design applications for linkage-based mechanical characters.
Automata
An Automaton is a self-operating machine, or a machine or control mechanism designed to automatically follow a predetermined sequence of operations, or respond to predetermined instructions (Wikipedia). While there are varied types of automata, today the term often refers to a hand-cranked toy with a humorous story, which may be called an animated cartoon. The most well-known collection is Cabaret Mechanical Theatre in the UK.
Tableau animé
Tableau Animé is a kind of flat automaton, an animated painting or cartoon.
Kinetic sculpture
The previous examples don’t mean that the outcome needs to be based on specific characters or stories. Abstract shapes and their choreography produce purely aesthetic sensations.
Humans and animals
Linkages are often used to mimic the movement of humans and animals. Leg mechanisms are one of the most popular examples among others.
Objects in our everyday life
Not only living things, everyday objects use linkages as well. Examples include a lamp arm, a scissor lift, a foldable wine rack and more.
Read/Watch
- Eameses’ Solar Do-nothing Machine
- Theo Jansen’s Strandbeest
- Alexandre Calder’s Circus
- More to read/watch and downloads
Exercises
- Make an one-frame mechanical cartoon.
- Submit a photo or a video of your outcome with a brief explanation.