Shapes of the Future
A Japanese prototype exhibition highlights the wonders of technology.
Tay Suan Chiang
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IN A CORNER of the National Design Centre sits a 'creature' from outer space. It has five long black arms mounted on a dome, each with three fingers. Once in a while, the arms come alive, moving in dance-like motions, almost reaching out to touch the visitor. Its name is Flagella, a machine created by Japanese design engineer Shunji Yamanaka who is also a professor at the University of Tokyo.
His Yamanaka Laboratory has been experimenting on a machine capable of movement, and has so far managed something between natural and artificial motion. Flagella, although made of hard plastic, moves like a sinewy creature, thanks to a motor that repeatedly rotates and counter rotates, as well as a special way of cutting and assembling the plastic to make it look stretchable.
The installation is one of the many on show at Prototyping in Tokyo: Illustrating Design-Led Innovation, featuring works from Yamanaka Laboratory. Since 2007, Yamanaka Laboratory has been studying the interaction between robots and humans, as well as producing prototypes to envision the future.
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