We spend a lot of time indoors, and generally the more fascinated you are by technology, the more time you spend inside…or at the very least within reachable distance of a power outlet. While 3D printers have been becoming desktop with ease, they have not yet become lap-top and so 3D printing activities usually require that we sacrifice the feeling of the wind in our faces in exchange for the excitement of creation.
What is worth knowing about though is that Instructables member Laura Devendorf worked through the process of engaging in plein-air 3D printing as part of her Autodesk Artist-in-Residence and has released the technical details and how-to’s for all to enjoy. So what exactly is this? The idea of painting en plein air was developed by French Impressionist painters in the 19th century as the act of painting outside, the idea being that it was important to focus on what the eye actually sees rather than the image after it is processed and refined by the intellect.
“[T]his project explores the role of place in digital fabrication. With this project, I hope to take a step back from the relationship between hand and machine to consider the role for the entire body-in-space and the machine. I like to think of it as a way to bring generative, site specific, and instruction art into conversation with one another.”
And in any case, this way you don’t have to get sand in your printer but you can still be obsessing about your projects…and who knows, it might actually start a conversation or two! Let’s hear your thoughts on Devendorf’s work in the 3D Printing Plein Air forum thread on 3DPB.com.
