6.23.2006

my first foray into Maya!





...for the class Special Effects of Form. Assignment #1 asked that we (my other 2 team members and myself) create a surface using 3 curves and 3 animation tools in Maya, and submit a 60-second animation and a 500 word essay. In phase one we created a cell structure/surface (John), phase two applied a soft-modifier to twist it (Kai), and phase three used clustering and spring constraints to generated the morphing form (me).
First thoughts after working with the software: Maya is designed to create form as surface and object as artificial constructs with the final rendering as the ultimate goal. Can Maya be used to create form from volume? Maya only reads solids as thin surfaces - everything is hollow (a solid cube is really a box with 6 surfaces). Can we use voxels or volumetric materials instead? Maybe play around with particles systems, fluid dynamics, fog/volume lights/radiosity/reflection/radiation....or are these only post-production effects? Might be interesting to explore voxels in medical imaging. Are they used in architectural simulations? How does the urban radar/xray at Halcro work?

special effects of form

Pretty excited about this class I am taking at Columbia called "Special Effects of Form", with Hernan Diaz Alonso instructing. It is an exploratory laboratory for producing form using Maya as a tool - two weeks in, and it really seems aligned with my thesis direction. I am teamed up with 2 AAD students, and today we pitched the ultrasound/whiteread/indirect mapping/volume idea as a starting point to the instructor. Hernan's comments:
- translate a logic from other mediums into Maya, instead of finding a logic within the software and trying to use it for something it wasn't designed to do
- do more research - what other mediums does this occur?
- start thinking about how this can translate to fabrication - cnc mill, laser cutter, 3d printing
- focus on translation, not replication

Project shadowspace

An exploration of urban voids, in-between space, and the intangible realm that lies at their periphery. Is it possible to generate form from the insubstantial?

Darcie Watson
Student

Living in New York City, getting my degree from the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

It's a really long story.

Contact darcie watson

darcie.watson@gmail.com