muk.luk.flux

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Bring me home, please

muk.luk.flux, by Amanda Parkes (check also her other works: Topobo and Nomad Pneumatics), is a pair of boots which change shape based on the speed of motion of the wearer. By drawing an analogy between respresentations of mechanical movement in contrast to bodily gesture, they mock the notion of the "machine aesthetic." An accelerometer in the boots tracks the wearers speed and when in motion, the boots expand into their 'engaged' position using a system of mechanical actuators in the structure of the boots.

walking3.jpg

They combine aesthetic inspiration from early 20th century Futurist design and classical Greek sculpture, with the notion of contemporary sports clothing investigating the absurdity of how fashion can change our identity, and ostensibly our performance, by making us appear faster, better, stronger with a stripe or a swoosh or a swirl...

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Mocking the Machine Aesthetic muk.luk.flux, by Amanda Parkes (check also her other works: Topobo and Nomad Pneumatics), is a pair of boots which change shape based on the speed of motion of the wearer. By drawing an analogy between respresentations... Read More

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3 Comments:

seems odd to me that someone from the MIT Media Lab would want to challenge the machine aesthetic. i don't undertsand why artists continue to use irony as a technique, it's been mass-produced and assimilated (primarily into the advertising "machine") by the Empire.

k_mitchell

yeah and also, i was dismayed to to see the use of both visual images and written language as communication on the linked websites. those techniques have been mass-produced and assimilated by the Empire blah blah blah blah blah

w_moore

images and languages aren't "techniques" or "strategies." i think that's what isaac was referring to.

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