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Subject: 
Re: Using Poser6 to generate Lego sculptures.
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.build.sculpture
Date: 
Sat, 4 Feb 2006 20:34:50 GMT
Viewed: 
4031 times
  
In lugnet.build.sculpture, David Winkler wrote:

  
Important Note: I am not a lawyer. I don’t know about the licensing issues associated with the Poser models. There may be issues using these in sculptures for sale. Is this a “still image” or a “simplification”?

-dw

At the recent BrickFest, there was a discussion of a few artsy-fartsy types at Rocklands over a good bit of good beer about “Art and LEGO” and whether it existed -or whether it was just translation of existing work into a new medium. You are in my opinion getting very close with your sculptures to creating something new.

The translation of the figure into plastic blocks, actually intensifies the concept of the modern man, by the use of this medium. Modular, synthetic, computerized, mathmatical, with a lack of curves (or rather the generation of the curves by means of discrete individual objects), actually takes the original model to a new and different emotional and intellectual level, and therefore, perhaps really does achieve a piece of art.

It does perhaps illuminate to the person experiencing the sculpture, a way of looking at man in a different way--from a different point of view. It does this for me. It is irrelevent whether that was really the artist’s intention or not. For with a piece of art, such as a painting, sculpture,photo, piece of music, novel, or dance will evoke different emotional and intellectual responses from each individual viewing it. To me, to see the human form displayed such as in your brilliant piece, says to me what we perhaps have become, and at the same time what we might not want to become--that is an algorithm of simple parts hooked together--like a computer program.

Without a doubt, if the posed model was created, even within a piece of software, by you, with the intent of creating a piece of sculpture, that would definitely be an original piece of art--you would hold the copyright--you would be the owner. If it is derivative of someone else’s model, as you seem to allude to, then it is perhaps just a simplicfication as you say, albeit an incredible one.

Or if you collaborated with the original artist to create the finished product, then that would be something really unique with both of yall being the “owners”.

However to take a picture of someone elses, and then translate it into a mosaic with some sort of algorithmic process, I do not think, is an original piece of art. It would be similar to taking an Ansel Adams photo, scan it , import it into Photoshop, and manipulate it--that would be essentially be a transformation of the original work of art.

But if you took the origial picture, and did the same thing, it would be original--might not be good, but would be intellectually your own.

You have, I believe, with the tools you have created, enabled some true original pieces to be created.

Look forward very, very much to seeing the next step.

Tommy ARmstrong

PS Now if you could get Bram to create stainless steel bricks and tranlated it into metal--that would be kewl also. (And very permanent). But then it would not be plastic either--evoking a different response.



Message is in Reply To:
  Using Poser6 to generate Lego sculptures.
 
A friend of mine was raving about how good (URL) Poser6> was. So I bought a copy. I have gotten a prototype to export from Poser6 to basic Lego outline. Most of this was just getting the model into a format that could be used in the manner that I (...) (19 years ago, 10-Nov-05, to lugnet.build.sculpture, FTX)  

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