These links are provided for your reference; we hope you find them useful. While we endeavor to keep them up-to-date, links on the web are susceptible to “link rot” – they change or go bad. Of course, we’re not responsible for what happens on external websites and, like other websites, you use them at your own risk.
Prototypes for Hermit Crab Shells
Andrew Werby’s Juxtamorphic Computer-mediated jewelry and sculpture, using nature as a starting point
BioSculptor Orthotic and Prosthetic CAD-CAM Systems
Scanning and CNC technology used to create classical-looking figurative sculpture in stone
Art Metalwork in Silver & Bronze. In Santa Cruz, CA, Bathsheba Grossman creates mathematically precise forms that intertwine in space, which she realizes by combining the latest Rapid Prototyping techniques with the ancient art of lost-wax casting.
Sculptural work mostly involving extruded styrofoam
”Pseudorealistic” paper portraits
The Art of Motion Control. Egg-bots, plasma-cut sculptures, engravings, robotic sculpture, etc.
”Displaced Animals”—farm animals with various 3D images superimposed
Digitally based sculpture, some realized using stereolithography techniques, also see his “sculpture generator”, a C++ program to develop some tricky topographies in 3D
Colored Patterns and Images from computer-controlled LEDs cover these sculptures, some of which spin
An accomplished digital printmaker, takes on the challenges of 3D modeling in the digital giraffe
Tele-Mechanical Mirrors
Digital Terata (aka monsters) and other projects
Woven Works use computer-controlled looms to translate photography into tapestry
A look at the work of Eric von Straaten, who uses 3D printing to manifest his creepy-looking images of young girls
A UK-based sculptor explores the possibilities of woodcarving using CNC tools and scanned natural forms
An index to his work in geometrical sculpture including “Gonads of the Rich and Famous”—his ball-shaped openwork forms developed using RP techniques
A painter, sculptor and designer who uses high-tech processes in service of his visionary art aesthetic
Harry used Rhino to build a digital “wireframe” model, which he duplicated in actual wire to form the structure underlying the complex organic forms of this concrete sculpture, “Neptunian Frolic”
Check out Jeff McWhinney's articulated "active" rings, designed in CAD and machined with CAM
Real Virtual Zone - seamless and simple simulation of a sculpture show
A Self-described "Troublemaker", Josh has forged his own path in digital sculpture, becoming one of the best-funded artists on Kickstarter with his own take on Skulls, Lacework and Tangles
Amazingly complex abstract sculptures made possible by 3D printing
Polychrome 3D prints combined with 2D art
”Deep, Dark” 3D representations of underground spaces
Mathematically-generated forms in various media
A pioneer in using 3D printing for sculpture, Mary merges figurative and abstract imagery in her arresting works
“The Interface: Computers, 3-D Modeling and Women Sculptors.” Details how women sculptors, including Mary Visser and Mary Bates, use computers in their work
Uses stereolithography to create Stereolithography Sculpture derived from anatomical scans and abstract geometry combined
Sculptures, animations, and designs
Sculpture based on large data-streams like the Dow Jones Averages
Celtic and Pictish Art carved with CNC equipment built by the artist
Mathematically-based models realized via Rapid Prototyping
Quirky and colorful metaphoric figures, puzzles and brain deconstructions
Sculptor Robert Michael Smith collaborates with Dr Anthony Atala to make art with living human cells, and discusses “Biophormatalasmith” in this YouTube video
This accomplished 3D sculptor does commercial and artistic projects for clients like advertising agencies, game developers and architectural firms
Stanley Lechtzin has been leading the way, training the next generation of jewelry designers in the latest CAD and RP techniques at Tyler University. On this page dedicated to his Lifetime Achievement Award, there are pictures of some of his own jewelry projects which use technology to best advantage
Mathematically-based model making and the “concretization” of abstractly-derived forms
Mathematically-based sculpture in metal and wood