Data Scarves

Knitwear designs graph the success of Etsy’s online marketplace

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In an homage to the online retailer Etsy, Natalie Rachel has produced a pair of handmade scarves that use the company’s data as inspiration for the patterns. As the basis for her Data Scarves, Rachel collected figures related new members, items sold and the apportionment of vintage, handmade and supply goods. She later graphed the resulting data and—with a bit of ingenuity and an eye for fashion—put together a selection of wearables that plot the company’s profile.

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In the world of online retailers, Etsy is synonymous with handmade goods. Constantly inspired by the creativity of sellers, Rachel used her talents for design and craft to create a final project for her Data Representation class at NYU’s ITP. Each design is one-of-a-kind, though we’re hoping to see more knit visualizations from her before the seasons change.

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In addition to selling the two scarves, Rachel has included prints of her elegant graphs. One is a pie graph detailing the types of items listed and corresponding to the infinite scarf, the other a comparative study of the growth of new members and the number of items sold over time. Both the graphs and the scarves are available through Rachel’s Etsy shop.


Tristan Perich

A musician-programmer translates data into melodies
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Equal parts programmer and musician, Tristan Perich graduated from Columbia University in 2004 and went on to earn a masters at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts’ Interactive Telecommunications program in 2007. While the interdisciplinary nature of ITP encourages a student body full of artists, programmers, theorists and less easily classifiable types, there’s nothing confusing about Perich’s work today. Designing code to create music or art, his aesthetic is about putting logic on the surface for a visceral effect, where people can see and understand it.

“Technology is abstracting these processes more and more these days,” Perich said in a recent interview with Cool Hunting. “Take my iPhone. You brush a finger across a piece of glass. We’re so detached from what’s actually happening that the computation itself seems almost magical. These are the sorts of things that make their way into my work—the transparency of a circuit. It’s all laid out there in front of you.”

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Perhaps the best example of this is Perich’s elegant and attractive 1-Bit Symphony. Perich composed five movements, programmed a microchip, and installed it into a CD jewel case complete with headphone jack. The result is beautifully simple—rather playing back a recording, the circuit plays the entire score live when you turn it on. You can hold a symphony in the palm of your hand.

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Of course, the one-bit buzzing doesn’t sound anything like a violin, and for some, the score might recall the Super Mario Brothers more than Bach or Beethoven. For Perich, who was a classically trained musician, that’s exactly the point. “I grew up playing the piano, and I hated other peoples’ classical music,”; he said. He started improvising and then composing his own, for himself and later for ensembles, but he was most inspired by the work of minimalist musicians like Philip Glass. “[Glass’s] work is very mathematical and sensitive; it almost lines up on a grid,” Perich said. “It’s a very digital way of thinking about music and harmony.”

Perich composes music for both microchips and traditional instruments, like piano and violin. He also builds visual representations for the sound as well. In an installation called “Interval Studies,” Perich built a board that consists of dozens of small speakers, each emitting a single one-bit tone from between a musical interval. “I took that frequency range and broke it up into 49 or 99 different slivers,” said Perich. “As you move across the piece, you can hear each individual frequency, but when you step back, all the different frequencies resolve themselves into one pitch.”

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In his side project, Loud Objects, Perich combines the visual, musical and performance aspects of electronics and music. He and bandmates Kunal Gupta and Katie Shima begin with the blank glass of an overhead projector, soldering together chips in silence. At the end, a cacophony of sound signals that the circuit is complete. Adding chips can change the sound in different ways. “At the end, you’ve seen these components connected and understand how power is routed through microchips,” Perich said.

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Perich is also currently working on a much larger installation of “Interval Studies” for a Rhizome commission. He received the Prix Ars Electronica in 2009, and was a featured artist in 2010 at Sonar, the International Festival of Advanced Music and Multimedia Art. For him, though, the best part of being an artist might not be sourcing speakers or performing in front of a rapt audience, but in actually doing the math.

“It’s unfortunate that so many people get turned off math by bad teachers,” he said. “I just find the foundations of mathematics to be really inspiring. Like how Turing was working with the limitations of math itself. I just find it to be really beautiful—visually, audibly, and in any other way.”

The Audi Icons series, inspired by the all-new Audi A7, showcases 16 leading figures united by their dedication to innovation and design.


ITP Winter Show 2010

Part one on the techie creativity from the minds of ITP grad students this season

We checked out the Interactive Telecommunications Program 2010 winter show yesterday at Tisch School of the Arts and like previous years, the overall depth and range of the projects was in itself impressive. Below are some that stood out for their ingenuity.

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Each drawer in Nick Yulman’s “Song Cabinet,” an interactive musical instrument, contains a different mechanical device linked into a computer synthesizer program. Opening a drawer starts a musical sequence, which changes depending on how far you open the drawer. You can also open and close all four drawers in different patterns to mix your own live song.

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A collaborative project between Mike Cohen, David Phillips and Michelle Temple, “Planting Steps” rethinks the indoor hydroponic farm. The use of primarily wood and copper piping to construct the planter cuts down on the more typical (and detrimental) ingredients found in hydro farms such as plastics, PVC piping and more.

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Another collaboration, “Write Me” by Christine Nguyen, Hsin-Yi Chien and Rune Madsen consists of 100 pieces of paper tied together and suspended from the ceiling. A projector displays the drawings or notes that a user at a station inputs with a writing pad.

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Eun Young Kang and Sukmo Koo’s project, “Dynamic Canvas,” is an interactive game using a mesh and plastic canvas controlled by two tubes. Each user blows into one of the tubes, spreading their color across the canvas, allowing the users to draw a picture together.

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Lia Martinez’s playful project dubbed “Planet Maker” lets you create your own animated planet by singing into a tube. The sweets sound of your voice populates the little world, and a swift punch to the center of the canvas clears it out for the next generation.