Artbots, competition for creative robots.

. Art

30.05.02 Artbots, competition for creative robots.
It was held at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn (New York), the first ArtBots: The Robot Talent Show , an exhibition / competition of robots 'talented' built by many malicious users. Ten projects were selected, respectively, by artists, engineers and geeks. The Audience Award went to 'AO2000', by David Webber, a musical automaton made of different common objects and old computers that form an interactive sound machine, which works by detecting the presence of the spectators and creating melodies in constant variation. The Jury Prize was awarded instead to 'SYMET Studio' Joseph Stefan Prosky, a group of ten robots powered by solar energy that draw abstract images made with marks traced through mild jolts that require several hours to complete and are totally dependent on the type of light used to power the robots themselves. Among other works are: 'Color Musically Yours. Love, Todd. ' Mira Friedlaender, Stephanie Hunt and Keith Waters, in which a computer scans colorful designs created by visitors by converting the data into music, through a simple calculation of the amount of light is reflected from the paper, 'do not break anything (after christian wolff) 'of douglas irving repetto, instead, consists of a turntable covered with a layer of stones with three robotic arms terminating with different materials (a stone, a piece of metal and a piece of wood), which rubs against the tiny rocks produce different types of sounds in a set of improvisation in which the different arms take into account what others are doing. 'Light Motive', David Birchfield, consists of a series of 'organisms' autonomous robotic that interact with each other and with the surrounding environment. Each 'organism' is equipped with a light, some light sensors and a number of prisms and reflective surfaces in addition to a microphone and a loudspeaker. The interaction takes place with the purpose of spreading their light in a more intensive way possible, with the microphones that amplify the twists of the strings they hang from the various organizations. 'Patterns of Metric Amplitude' Gregory Shakar, is a life-size kinetic sculpture that creates unusual rhythms through eight additional metronomes that emit a tone when crossing the middle of their run. Via a control panel is possible to vary the speed of each metronome in order to create different melodies. 'Roving Walter Walter' of mxHz.org (lahaag and chip.kali) consists in a set of 4 wheels independently controlled which are mounted under a video camera and two microphones. Scrolling through the room the unit analyzes the audio / visual, piling a bit 'as humans do when they move. All this, analyzed for similarities is shown by an lcd screen and two small speakers integrated into the project. From the results purely graphic is, on the contrary, 'Sketching Device # 1' of Ranjit Bhatnagar, which through simple move instructions wheel unpredictably with low-frequency vibrations that move a sheet of paper so that it is colored by specific colors. 'Sumi-ebot' Eva Sutton and Sarah Hart consists of an autonomous robot that paints according to an ancient Zen style, in coordination with others, as appropriate, via infrared signals and detecting the boundaries of paper and their respective areas of intervention allowed . Absolutely evocative, finally, 'The Reader' by John S. Lathram III, created sull'integrazine of an organic structure (a wooden arm) with micro-motors and mechanical parts that create a total entity, almost 'alive', created to turn the pages of a book, in this case of Shakespeare and project its image on the back wall.