Tag Archives: art

Cyberpunk style arrives: living jewelry and electronic tattoos

As a person seemingly born with a missing coolness gene, a big part of the appeal of cyberpunk was its visual aesthetic – why stick to a baseline body when you can bolt stuff on to make it look more interesting? And while I’m getting too old to care much about impressing people with the way I look, it’s fun to see those technofashions slowly seeping out from the pages of much-loved novels and into reality.

Exhibit one: EpiSkin, described by its creator as jewellery which “extends biological identity by combining technology and design into a new decorative body surface. This project is an exploration into the decorative technological control over biology to create an artifact which is a hybrid of both.”

EpiSkin living jewellery

Cultured in a lab, this biological jewelry is made of epithelia cells which grow to create an artificial skin. The cells are grown into custom designed forms, controlled by the artist. The cells are incubated for a period of time, following which they are stained with a custom dye. The skin is then visibly sealed into a wearable object. The process in creating these pieces includes human tissue culturing as well as computer generated form on which the cells are cultured and then transplanted into adaptive jewelry. The jewelry is worn on the body, completing the relationship of biological cells mediated by technology.

Exhibit two: Bare, a skin-safe conductive ink

Bare - conductive ink tattoos

… that is applied directly onto the skin allowing the creation of custom electronic circuitry. This innovative material allows users to interact with electronics through gesture, movement, and touch. Bare can be applied with a brush, stamp or spray and is non-toxic and temporary. Application areas include dance, music, computer interfaces, communication and medical devices. Bare is an intuitive and non-invasive technology which will allow users to bridge the gap between electronics and the body.

By the time the children of my contemporaries start choosing their own fashions, there’s going to be some wild stuff to see on the mean streets of style. [EpiSkin story via PosthumanBlues; Bare Conductive Ink via Bruce Sterling]

Cheese: Now with artistic expression

hello-kittyAs if to answer the call for more cheese-based sfnal items:

Cheese made with breast milk has been served at the launch of a new art exhibition in London.

The Alejandra Ortiz-Reynoso show is named after the woman who donated the main ingredient. Artist Raul Ortega Ayala wants to “explore our first encounter with food.” ABC News reports that the cheese was served on crackers, and that the milk was donated voluntarily.

Hello Kitty Cream Cheese Head by Slack-a-gogo.

Ray Bradbury on the real Martians

bradburyRay Bradbury has written the foreward for a recent issue of National Geographic, fans of The Martian Chronicles will apreciate his sublimely poetic enthusiasm for space exploration:

I like to think of the cosmos as a theater, yet a theater cannot exist without an audience, to witness and to celebrate. Robot craft and mighty telescopes will continue to show us unimaginable wonders. But when humans return to the moon and put a base there and prepare to go to Mars and become true Martians, we—the audience—literally enter the cosmic theater. Will we finally reach the stars?

Also check out the accompanying art by Michael Whelan.

[via Boing Boing][image from Kuja on flickr]

More future art: Razer

Via Irene Gallo at Tor.com (who, as Tor’s art director, surely knows exactly what the hell she is talking about), here’s some more awesome near-future science fictional artwork from a contributor to the ConceptArt forums who goes by the name of Razer:

gunmen in a corridor by Razer

cyberpunk shootout by Razer

futuristic city skyline by Razer

The guy has a knack with the gritty street-level stuff as well as the large-scale vision, and the thread where Razer posted these has literally dozens of other images from our cyberpunk tomorrows right out into outer space, all of which are pretty bloody impressive – to this fumble-fingered non-artist, at least.

I’m getting more and more tempted to do some sort of regular art slot here at Futurismic… what think you, readers?