Check out these visual art images:
An American Puzzle
Image by cliff1066™
An American Puzzle, 2006, wood and metal type by Lloyd G. Schermer
Lloyd Schermer created An American Puzzle out of antique printing type, advertising plates, and engravings created for mastheads. Some of the type blocks are as much as two hundred years old and include carved maple, birch, ebony, walnut and mahogany, as well as forged metal pieces. In 1964, when Schermer’s newspaper in Missoula, Montana, converted from typeset printing to offset lithography (which uses photography to transfer the image of each page of a newspaper), he salvaged much of the old type and stored it in his home until he could decide what to do with it. Almost thirty years later, Schermer began working with the type, using a strong solvent to clean the ink from the typeface, then waxing and buffing the sculptural bits before mounting them to a support. An American Puzzle is a richly abstracted field of shapes that evokes an archaeological remnant, a layer of history rescued from a "dig." It suggests the visual impact of the printed page as well as the thousands of voices that contribute to a community’s history over the generations. Schermer has served on several boards within the Smithsonian, and the wide variety of elements in this piece reflects the broad interests of the institution as well as the artist’s memories of the publishing business.
americanart.si.edu/luce/object.cfm?key=338&artistmedi…
“I give you… the future”
Image by kandinski
He didn’t really say that. Tenori-on is the musical+visual instrument he is developing with Yamaha. He has taken 4 years to bring Tenori-on to fuition (this is the second prototype), and he reckons it might be in production in late 2006.
Four years. Compare that to three months for Elektroplankton.