Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD

An exhibition exploring the latest digital design and manufacturing processes opens today at New York’s Museum of Arts and Design.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Untitled (5), 2008, by Richard Dupont
Untitled (5), 2008, by Richard Dupont

The exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) features more than 120 examples of sculpture, jewellery, fashion and furniture that demonstrate different uses for computer-assisted production methods.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Twisted Dump Truck by Wim Delvoye
Twisted Dump Truck (Counterclockwise, Scale model 1:5), 2011, by Wim Delvoye

All of the pieces on show have been created in the past decade by artists, architects and designers including Zaha Hadid, Anish Kapoor, Joris Laarman, Daniel Libeskind and Marc Newson.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Prototype for a 3D-Printed House by Softkill Design
Prototype for a 3D Printed House, 2012, by Softkill Design

Some new works produced specially for the exhibition will also be presented, including a 4.5-metre-tall digitally-scanned mask of artist Richard Dupont.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Nike Vapor Laser Talon 3D-printed football boot
Nike Vapor Laser Talon, 2013, by Shane Kohatsu

“From sculptural fantasy to functional beauty to conceptual idiosyncrasies, the works of art in Out of Hand, all created in the past decade, demonstrate an explosive, unprecedented scope of artistic expression,” said curator Ronald T. Labaco.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Liquid Glacial "Smoke" Coffee Table by Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher
Liquid Glacial “Smoke” Coffee Table, 2012, by Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher. Image is by Jacapo Spilimbergo

In keeping with the Museum of Arts and Design’s curatorial policy there is a focus on experimental uses of materials and technologies in art and industry, rather than products designed for the mass market.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Rapidprototypedshoe by Marloes ten Bhömer
Rapidprototypedshoe, 2010, by Marloes ten Bhömer

“The cross-disciplinary nature of the work and the exploration of seemingly disparate themes and concepts allows for boundless creativity,” Labaco added. “The exhibition puts these pioneering works in dialogue, highlighting at once their vast diversity and the trends and ideas that connect them.”

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - ICD/ITKE Research Pavilion by Achim Menges and Jan Knippers
ICD/ITKE Research Pavilion, 2011, by Achim Menges and Jan Knippers. Image is by Achim Menges

Several of the exhibits have previously featured on Dezeen, including a 3D-printed dress for Dita Von Teese, a boot for American football players with 3D-printed studs, and a shoe by Dutch designer Marloes ten Bhömer that can be printed for a perfect fit.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Volume.MGX Lamp by Dror Benshetrit
Volume.MGX Lamp, 2009, by Dror Benshetrit. Image is by .MGX Materialise

We’ve also published stories about a polygonal plywood pavilion at a German university, a proposal for a web-like printed house, and a marble armchair by Joris Laarman based on the way bones grow, all of which feature in the show.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Bone Armchair by Joris Laarman
Bone Armchair, 2008, by Joris Laarman. Image is by Jon Lam.

Visitors to the exhibition will be invited to try out technologies including computer-aided modelling software and 3D printers, while designers-in-residence will be on hand to demonstrate some of the processes.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Lacquered Paper-Objects by Nendo
Lacquered Paper-Objects, 2012, by Nendo. Image is by Masayuki Hayashi

The Museum of Arts and Design announced last month that it has appointed Glenn Adamson as its new director. Adamson had been head of research at the V&A, where he co-curated the 2011 exhibition Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970 to 1990.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Clone Chair by Julian Mayor
Clone Chair, 2005, by Julian Mayor. Image is by Julian Mayor and Topaz Leung.

Here are some more details about the exhibition from the Museum of Arts and Design:


Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital

Exploring the latest trends in digital fabrication, Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at the Museum of Arts and Design is the first in-depth survey dedicated to exploring the impact of computer-assisted methods of production on contemporary art, architecture, and design. Opening in October, this landmark exhibition brings together more than 120 works of sculpture, jewelry, fashion, and furniture by 85 artists, architects, and designers from 20 countries to examine how new technologies are pushing the boundaries of artistic expression and creation. The cutting-edge works highlighted in the exhibition demonstrate the reciprocal relationship between art and technological innovation as well as materials and new techniques—an area of exploration that has long been at the core of MAD’s mission and curatorial program.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Brain Wave Sofa by Lucas Maassen and Unfold
Brain Wave Sofa, 2010, by Lucas Maassen and Unfold

To mark the launch of MAD’s new holiday hours, visitors are invited for a sneak peek of the exhibition on Columbus Day, October 14. The completed exhibition will be on view October 16, 2013, through July 6, 2014.

Organized by Ronald T. Labaco, MAD’s Marcia Docter Curator, the exhibition features new and recent work from 2005 to the present, including commissions created especially for Out of Hand and objects never presented before in the U.S. by such artists, architects, and designers as Barry X Ball, Bespoke Innovations, Wim Delvoye, Richard Dupont, Zaha Hadid, Anish Kapoor, Joris Laarman, Daniel Libeskind, Maya Lin, Greg Lynn, Lucas Maassen, Jürgen Mayer- Hermann, Achim Menges, Marc Newson, Nike, Alan McCollum, Roxy Paine, Frank Stella, Hiroshi Sugimoto, and Unfold, among many others. Two large-scale sculptures—a fifteen-foot- high digitally scanned mask of artist Richard Dupont’s face, and a towering abstraction of wrestling figures created through digital milling techniques by Michael Rees—will activate the space outside the Museum on Columbus Circle and serve as an introduction to the exhibition.

Bust of Lady Belhaven (after Samuel Joseph) by Stephen Jones and Made by .MGX by Materialise
Bust of Lady Belhaven (after Samuel Joseph), 2011, by Stephen Jones and Made by .MGX by Materialise. Image is by Kent Pell, Courtesy of Phillips de Pury and Company

“The compelling works in Out of Hand expand audience understanding of the ways artists and designers from around the world are utilizing these new technologies to extend their artistic practice, revealing how these innovations are also transforming practices in manufacturing, healthcare, and other fields not readily associated with the contemporary art world,” said David McFadden, MAD’s William and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator. “By examining these trends through the lens of artistic expression, MAD is opening up a dialogue on the significance of digital technologies to our larger culture and global society.”

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - 3D-printed dress for Dita Von Teese by Michael Schmidt with Francis Bitonti
3D-printed dress for Dita Von Teese by Michael Schmidt with Francis Bitonti. Image is by Albert Sanchez; courtesy of Michael Schmidt Studios

Building on MAD’s practice of making the artistic process accessible in the gallery spaces, audience participation plays a central role in the exhibition. The Museum’s second floor will be equipped with 3D printers, modeling software, and computer monitors, allowing visitors to experiment with the technologies explored in the show. Designers-in-residence working in the gallery will demonstrate various digital techniques and fabrication tools used to create objects like those in the exhibition, and a range of special workshops, public and educational programs that provide visitors with hands-on opportunities to deepen their engagement with 3D software and hardware throughout the exhibition’s run. Also integrated into the installation are video clips that explain individual artistic practices and the divergent approaches toward incorporating digital fabrication in the creative process. Additionally, a number of the featured works include interactive components.

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Rapid Racer
Rapid Racer, 2011, by Andreas Schulz , Barbara Kotte, Johannes Zäuner, Rebecca Wilting, and Nicolas Eggert. Image is by Johannes Roloff

The exhibition is conceptually organized around six themes, which provide a framework for navigating the diverse range of artwork on view and reflect aesthetic trends and artistic approaches:

  • In Modeling Nature biological and ecological phenomena serve as a point of departure for artistic creativity;
  • New Geometries explores how mathematical formulae are applied to create intricate three-dimensional patterns and geometric forms large and small;
  • Rebooting Revivals reveals how creators use computer-assisted production to reference or appropriate notable historical art works and decorative styles;
  • Digital manipulation is also used to reconceptualize human figuration and the body in Remixing the Figure;
  • Works in Pattern as Structure incorporate movement, sound, light, and other sensory elements to create immersive art forms that activate the gallery space;
  • Processuality documents how the act of making plays a vital role in the creation and presentation of works that reveal the limitless possibilities of these emerging technologies.

“From sculptural fantasy to functional beauty to conceptual idiosyncrasies, the works of art in Out of Hand, all created in the past decade, demonstrate an explosive, unprecedented scope of artistic expression,” said Curator Ronald T. Labaco. “The cross-disciplinary nature of the work and the exploration of seemingly disparate themes and concepts allows for boundless creativity. The exhibition puts these pioneering works in dialogue, highlighting at once their vast diversity and the trends and ideas that connect them.”

Out of Hand: Materializing the Postdigital at MAD - Hyphae Lamps by Nervous System
Hyphae Lamps, 2011, by Nervous System. Image is by Jessica Rosenkrantz

To provide audiences with the full sweep of innovation in this rapidly growing field, the exhibition includes objects created through purely digital fabrication techniques alongside works that combine traditional handcrafted processes with these new methods.

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the Postdigital at MAD
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Glenn Adamson appointed director of Museum of Arts and Design

Glenn Adamson

News: New York’s Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) has appointed Glenn Adamson, the present head of research at London’s V&A museum, as its new director.

Adamson, who started his career as an intern at the New York institution, will take up the post next month. He succeeds former director Holly Hotchner, who stepped down in April.

“Glenn has incredible vision and depth of knowledge in the field,” said MAD board chairman Lewis Kruger, who announced the appointment yesterday. “As we celebrate the fifth anniversary in our building at Columbus Circle, Glenn’s appointment marks an exciting new chapter in MAD’s trajectory, expanding the role the museum plays in New York, in the US, and around the world.”

“I am honored to have been selected to serve as the next director of MAD,” said Adamson. “I began my career in museums at this institution, working as an intern just after graduating from college, and I have closely followed MAD’s development and expansion in the years since.”

MAD, which explores “the intersection of art, craft and design today,” moved to its new home on Columbus Circle in Manhattan in 2008. The building was designed by architects Roche-Dinkeloo with interiors by Fox & Fowle Architects.

Boston-born Adamson joined the V&A in London in 2005. Besides heading the museum’s reseach department he co-curated the 2011 exhibition Postmodernism: Style and Subversion 1970 to 1990 as well as the forthcoming exhibition The Future: A History, which will inaugurate the V&A’s new temporary exhibition galleries when they open in 2017.

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In Brief: Taschen Magic, Take One/Leave One at MAD, Paul Schimmel’s Next Move


Presto. An image from The Big Book of Magic, new this month from Taschen.

• Our new favorite way to make $70 disappear is The Big Book of Magic. Newly conjured by Taschen, the century-spanning tome features hundreds of rarely seen vintage posters, photographs, handbills, and engravings as well as paintings by the likes of Hieronymus “Abracadabra” Bosch and Caravaggio.

• Take an object, leave an object. Such is the invitation of “Museum as Plinth,” an interactive exhibit that opens today in the lobby of the Museum of Arts and Design in New York. Consider the role of museums, curators, and the general public in validating what is and what is not design as you ponder your new souvenir–stamped “From the Collection of the MAD Museum.”

• It’s official: Paul Schimmel, formerly the chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, is hooking up with Hauser & Wirth. He’s joined the gallery as a partner and will run a new L.A. arts space called Hauser Wirth & Schimmel. Expected to open in 2015, the new venue is “envisioned as a museum-like destination for experiencing art in context,” according to a statement issued yesterday by the gallery.
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The evolution of Charlotte in Stop Motion

Metropolis by Rob Carter – Last 3 minutes from Rob Carter on Vimeo.


Rob Carter’s
film Metropolis charts the evolution of Charlotte, North Carolina, through an amazing stop-motion paper animation. The full film will screen at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City through April 4, 2010.

Via: