Exploratorium
 
For Immediate Release
November 1, 2007
Images Available
Contact:
Linda Dackman 415. 561. 0363
Leslie Patterson 415. 561.0377
images@exploratorium.edu

 

Making Faces (2007) by David Hanson
Master Mind Machine (2007) by Kal Spelletich and
Animal Cam, by Sam Easterson

November 9, 2007-December 31, 2008
Artworks in Conjunction with Mind

Making Faces,
by David Hanson
The Exploratorium’s new Mind exhibition, four years in the making, runs November 9, 2007-December 31, 2008, and includes the cutting-edge work of both artists and scientists. The artworks include:

Making Faces (2007)
By David Hanson

How does it feel to interact with a lifelike robot? The robot’s software helps it recognize and fixate on human faces. Each of its servomotors moves a rubbery “muscle,” and these movements are coordinated to mimic real human facial expressions. Notice the complexity of even simple expressions. How many parts of the face move in a happy grin? An angry scowl? And pay attention to your reactions. It’s obviously a machine, yet many respond emotionally to the robot’s changing expressions.

Master Mind Machine (2007)
By Kal Spelletich, Artist-in-Residence

We play the machines, and the machines play us.
Kraftwerk

Master Mind Machine (2007) is a mix of sculpture and storytelling, science and technology, play and fear and biofeedback. Visitors are given control of strong and unpredictable technologies into their own hands -- enhancing and extending their own movements -- by interacting with new kinds of beings.

Animal Cam
By Sam Easterson

Video artist Sam Easterson documents a world very different from the one we are used to. Animal Cam shows us the world as seen by a wide range of non-human creatures. Easterson mounts tiny cameras on animals in the wild to record both their activities and points of view on their surroundings. The footage he obtains makes human viewers deeply rethink their own places and roles in their environments. (Easterson’s cameras eventually detach themselves from their hosts.) Animal Cam shows the world from perspectives as diverse as those of an armadillo, alligator, a bison, a scorpion, and even a housefly. (He also records the world from plants’ vantage points.) He is a graduate of New York’s Cooper Union and the University of Minnesota.

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The Exploratorium is located inside the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco's Marina District. Museum admission is as follows: Members FREE; Adults (18-64) $14.00; University Students (with ID) $11.00; Senior Citizens (65+) $11.00; People with disabilities $11.00; Youth (13-17) $11.00; Children (4-12) $9.00; Children Under 4 FREE. Exploratorium hours are TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY 10am–5pm, CLOSED MONDAYS, except for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents’ Day, Memorial Day and Labor Day. The Exploratorium is wheelchair accessible. For information, call (415) EXP-LORE.



Exploratorium
3601 Lyon Street
San Francisco
California  94123-1099
415.561.0363 telephone
415.561.0307 facsimile
pubinfo@exploratorium.edu
www.exploratorium.edu
the museum of science,
art, and human perception

CONTACT: Linda Dackman, Public Information Director (415) 561-0363 / Leslie Patterson (415) 561-0377