Friday 19 April 2024
Font Size
   
Monday, 07 November 2011 19:28

Artist Converts Seismogram of Japanese Earthquake Into Sculpture

Rate this item
(0 votes)
Artist Converts Seismogram of Japanese Earthquake Into Sculpture

Data from the devastating earthquake that shook Japan this year becomes a 3-D sculpture.
Photo: Luke Jerram

Artist Luke Jerram has converted a seismogram of the devastating earthquake that took place in Japan in March into a 3-D-printed sculpture.

Wired U.K.

The seismogram charts nine minutes of the earthquake in its varying intensities. The graph was rotated using computer-aided design to create a 3-D image and then 3-D-printed using rapid-prototyping technology. The piece — called the T?hoku Japanese Earthquake Sculpture — is 12 inches long and 8 inches wide.

This is not the first time that Jerram has created a sculptural representation of a catastrophe — he has also created a piece based on a sound file of the Hiroshima atomic bomb explosion. Other projects include his hot air balloon-based Sky Orchestra and a ring that he gave to his wife for their anniversary that doubled as a tiny projector.

The piece will be on show at the Terra exhibition at Jerwood Visual Arts in London from Nov. 9 to Dec. 11.

See more images of T?hoku Japanese Earthquake Sculpture in Wired UK’s gallery.

Artist Converts Seismogram of Japanese Earthquake Into SculptureOlivia Solon is a journalist, blogger and geek with a penchant for animal-themed T-shirts. Associate Editor of Wired.co.uk. Tech, science, media, culture and zoo-borns.
Follow @olivia_solon on Twitter.

Authors:

French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

Parmi nos clients

mobileporn