MakerLabs puts 3D printers, laser cutters in artists' hands - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:21 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

MakerLabs puts 3D printers, laser cutters in artists' hands

High tech meets fine art at MakerLabs, a new studio and gallery opening in Vancouver today that will give artists a range of powerful new tools.

New Vancouver art studio offers use of robotic mills too

High tech meets fine art at MakerLabs, a new studio and gallery opening in Vancouver today that will give artists a range of powerful new tools.

For $100 a month.artists will be able to use the studio`s 3D printers, laser cutters, and roboticmills or describe their projects to one of the studio's four employees, who can make it for them.

MakerLabscofounder DerekGawsays he got the idea whenhe was living in San Francisco and was a member of TechShop, a space with a similar concept.

Big with Burning Man

While he calls himself a "recreational" artist, Gaw recently worked on a big project for the alternative art event Burning Man.

"We built a 20-foot-tall seated meditating man. And then, at the end of the week, we burned it," he tells Rick Cluff on CBC Radio'sThe Early Edition.

Giant body parts appear popular.During arecent tour of the studio,there was a six-foot-tall nose anda 15-foot fibreglass, mechanical beating heartthatwill be lit with programmable LEDs at Burning Man.

$100,000 investment

High-tech gear does not come cheap.Gaw saysthey've spent over $100,000 on the equipment, and that doesn't include the 3D printer.

The ZCorp650 printer is on loan from 3Design, a 3D Systems distributor, and the studio essentially acts as a showroom to show the public what's possible with the technology.

"Isn't that like cheating?," asksCluff, "I mean, it's one thing to sculpt a nose. It's another thing justto push it into a computer and 3D reproduce a nose."

"I think it pushes the importance back to the content," says Gaw, "So if you think about the act of writing. What makes writing great isn't that the writer wrote all the words in the book himself. But now it can be printed automatically, and [accessed by]a lot more people."

MakerLabs is located at221 East 10th Avenuein Vancouver.

MakerLabs cofounder Derek Gaw on CBC Radio's The Early Edition. (CBC)