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  2. Modular art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_art

    Another portfolio of interactive modular art comes out of Studio for A.R.T. and Architecture, a New York-based firm headed by Donald Rattner. [non-primary source needed] Rattner has designed modular art in the media of wall sculpture, rotational paintings, tapestries, artist's wallpapers and artist's books. To bring his work and those of other ...

  3. Scanning probe lithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanning_probe_lithography

    Scanning probe lithography [1] (SPL) describes a set of nanolithographic methods to pattern material on the nanoscale using scanning probes. It is a direct-write, mask-less approach which bypasses the diffraction limit and can reach resolutions below 10 nm. [ 2 ]

  4. Modular constructivism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_Constructivism

    Modular constructivism is a style of sculpture that emerged in the 1950s and 1960s and was associated especially with Erwin Hauer and Norman Carlberg.It is based on carefully structured modules which allow for intricate and in some cases infinite patterns of repetition, sometimes used to create limitless, basically planar, screen-like formations, and sometimes employed to make more ...

  5. Erwin Hauer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin_Hauer

    Erwin Hauer was Professor Emeritus at the Yale University School of Art, where he taught from 1957 until 1990. light-diffusing wall design 2 in church in Liesing, Vienna, Austria, 1951 Hauer's design studio in New Haven, Connecticut is well known for the production of sculptural, light-diffusing architectural screens and walls employing Hauer's ...

  6. Composition with Grid No. 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composition_with_Grid_No._1

    The Dutch art historian Carel Blotkamp hypothesizes that this painting is one of Mondrian's first to use a modular or grid-like system. [3] Later X-ray photography corroborates this, revealing that Mondrian sketched an underlying grid pattern of uniform rectangles based on the golden ratio. [4]

  7. Norman Carlberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Carlberg

    Black Widow, by Norman Carlberg (1975). Commissioned for Harry Seidler and Associates for Edmund Barton Building in Canberra, Australia. Photo courtesy of John Roach. Harry Seidler was an Australian architect who was a leading proponent of Modernism in Australia, and was the first to incorporate key principals of the Bauhaus in his architectural projects in Australia.

  8. Module pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Module_pattern

    In software engineering, the module pattern is a design pattern used to implement the concept of software modules, defined by modular programming, in a programming language with incomplete direct support for the concept.

  9. John P. Bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_P._Bell

    Bell designed the third generation of the tool, again applying software design principles to art by re-envisioning the variable media paradigm to treat an artwork as a system of modular components with defined interactions and parameters that was inspired by object oriented programming patterns. [10]