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Working title: Big Mammoth? (as pun on Boston Dynamics’ Big Dog)
Topic: Designing a concept car as a case-study to expand upon the line of thought emerging from the Machine Wilderness programme.
Outcome: a printed publication in the Handbook series by Verlag für Handbücher VfH
An in depth exploration of how machines relate to landscapes. A prototyping experiment centered on the forecasting tool known as the concept car.
A car - like an organism - is an expression of its habitat. When making a visual survey of concept-car-art it is striking to see how often they show machines populating asphalt desert landscapes. Perhaps unwittingly these are statements about the relationship between cars and their environment. How we relate to landscapes is studied by ecologists, poets, artists, farmers, cooks, etc. This prototype therefore starts from a transdisciplinary approach, not in the context of a desert, but a biodiverse European landscape and within a longterm view of interacting populations surfing collectively on the geological and environmental currents that carry them.
As a starting point I propose looking at former mega-fauna of the European continent, whose ecological niches may be vacant. The Mammoth might be an interesting model-organism because of its carrying capacity and range.
Applying phenology to product design: from efficiency towards grace
Extending communication / navigation from systems to organisms / landscapes: towards a rich spectrum of biological/environmental interactions
Embedded energy cycles: towards local energy regimes
Embedded material cycles:
Phenotype:
on elephants in Europe:
on concept cars: