Fleshing Out seminar is part of a two-day event on material research with the second day being a workshop. The host of this seminar is V2_, an organization for unstable media based in Rotterdam. Specifically to the V2_ spirit is not just to talk but also to demo - picking up on MIT media lab’s slogan demo or die.




An immersive and subversive outlook on garments was shown in the presentation by Joanna Berzowska (PL/CAN/US) XS Labs: Electronic garments that consume the body. Using electronics and shape memory as an integral part of the fabric Joanna can wire the material in such a way that allows pieces of garment to move, inflate and flex. Nitinol is a shape memory alloy (SMA) made from a mixture of nickel and titanium that, once treated to acquire a specific shape, has the ability to indefinitely remember its geometry. She currently working on a dress named Venus where a leaf coiled around the wearers could act to open but also coil itself around the head as if to consume the wearer – adding the notion that clothes should also inflict pain.
Kristina Andersen (DK/UK) had brought with her a wonderful set of boxes each fitted with a particular sensor responding to touch/light/sound by producing some sort of feedback flashing diodes/whirling sounds/etc. Her talk A Naïve Understanding of Electronics looked at ideas of how we formulate an understanding of the technology around us without actually knowing how they work. As an investigation she gives students DIY electronic kits (made for 12 year olds) who will try to put them together on their own accord. As a result of this hacking process new, unintended and amusing electronic devices are built. Her research focuses very much on children to whom she gives simple devices to play with thereby finding unintended uses (and narrations) of the devices.


