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On
April 11, 2002, the Eli Whitney Museum will open an exhibition of
small works by designers, artists, architects, educators, and engineers.
Each will make of common materials uncommon expressions.
This
exhibition will help define design as a way of thinking: a fundamental
mission of the Museums teaching. The exhibition will celebrate
the breadth and significance of design as an economic activity in
the New Haven region
The
April 11th premier will support the Museums Apprentice Training
Program and will underwrite workshops and classes for very young
designers from all communities.
The
Ideal: The Sphere
Leonardo
wrestled with philosophy. He studied the ancient Greeks who illustrated
ideas with mathematics. Like Plato, he envisioned pure forms,a simple
and perfect geometry beyond the surface of the imperfect world.
Of theses forms, the sphere was quintessential: the absolute atom,
the pure planet.
The
Real: The Cradle
Leonardo
reveled in invention
the creations of the human hand that manipulate,
manage, magnify and mirror nature. Nature usurped classical geometry
as the ruler of Leonardos mind. And yet Leonardo connected
invention to nature as simply and precisely as the concave of the
tee embraces the curve of the sphere.
The
Challenge
Does
the tee exist only for the sphere? Leonardo proposes that it is
an invented relationship and so it is possible to improvise infinite
new relationships. Create new relationships for the sphere, the
tee or both. Find new connections, new forms and new meanings.
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