Stacy Jo Scott (born 1981) is an American artist, art educator, curator, and writer based in Eugene, Oregon, who works in ceramics and digital fabrication.
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| - Stacy Jo Scott (born 1981) is an American artist, art educator, curator, and writer based in Eugene, Oregon, who works in ceramics and digital fabrication. (en)
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| - BFA, 2010, University of Oregon (en)
- MFA, 2012, Cranbrook Academy of Art (en)
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| - Digital fabrication and ceramics (en)
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| - "The Web was just the proof of concept. Now the revolution hits the real world." With these words, Chris Anderson, editor of Wired magazine, joins Makerbot and RepRap creators and countless breathless bloggers in heralding the dawn of a technology that promises to bring to bear the same force that upturned media industries to manufacturing industries. This technology is desktop 3D printing which used 3D object files to build up an object through the deposition of layers of raw material.
...The tools of industrial design seem tantalizingly close, open to all. Given that object data is easily exchanged, edited and endlessly vast, the potential for revolution seems only logical. The manufacturing industry is destabilized and individuals regain an agency lost since the first industrial revolution.
...An especially interesting corollary can be found in the utopian project of craft-idealists like William Morris... Morris, usually described as anti-machine, deserves a re-reading for how he saw the machine in terms of idealized craft production. Morris called for machinery as a "help to the workman's hand-labor and not a supplanter of it". ...Also, "machines of the most ingenious and best-approved kinds will be used when necessary, but will be used simply to save human labor". (en)
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| - from "At-Home 3-D Printing & the Return of a Craft Utopia" (en)
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| - Stacy Jo Scott (born 1981) is an American artist, art educator, curator, and writer based in Eugene, Oregon, who works in ceramics and digital fabrication. (en)
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