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Designers and engineers of "Amatria" have an app that shows what each moving part of the sculpture means and represents. "Amatria" is made of 3D-printed formations and prototype cells filled with self-renewing chemistry.
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Designers and engineers of "Amatria" have an app that shows what each moving part of the sculpture means and represents. "Amatria" is made of 3D-printed formations and prototype cells filled with self-renewing chemistry.
Media School Professor Barbara Cherry speaks during the Bloomington Faculty Council meeting April 3. The Bloomington Faculty Council had its first meeting for the 2018-2019 academic year Tuesday to discuss student outreach, vote on proposed amendments and examine the trends of students graduating with credits from other institutions.
Senior Ryan McCreary, sophomore Mark Lambert and other dancers from the Jacobs School of Music Ballet Department perform the piece "Choosing Happiness" by Nicholas Gray. The work of student choreographers in the Jacobs School of Music Ballet Department will be showcased at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.
Freshman Anderson Dasilva and sophomore Marissa Arnold perform the piece "At Last" by Rachel Schultz. “Ballet at the BCT: The Choreography Project” will take place at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The free event will showcase the work of student choreographers in the IU Ballet Department.
Senior Gillian Worek, sophomore Mark Lambert and junior Sophia Brodin perform Ryan McCreary's "Stories" during a ballet rehearsal Tuesday night.
Freshman Bryanna Mitchell performs Reece Conrad's "The Man Who Named the Band."
Juniors Nicholas Gray and Georgia Dalton perform Sterling Manka's piece "Litost" during a ballet rehearsal Tuesday night at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.
Juniors Camille Kellems and Anna Barned and sophomores Marissa Arnold and Kyra Muttilainen perform Claudia Rhett's piece "Another Time."
"Amatria" is a luminous and interactive sculptural landscape located in the atrium of Luddy Hall. The sculpture is comprised of 3D-printed formations and mesh-like canopies filled with pulsing mechanisms.
"Amatria" contains spheres depicting hollow bone structures of birds and mammals. These structures are lined with bubbling prototype cells filled with self-renewing chemistry.
Philip Beesley, Canadian visionary architect and artist, led the construction of "Amatria," located in Luddy Hall. The project also involved researchers Salvador Breed, Poul Holleman and engineer Rob Gorbet.
"Amatria" contains spheres depicting hollow bone structures of birds and mammals. These structures are lined with bubbling prototype cells filled with self-renewing chemistry.
Thomas Jefferson's copy of the “Acts Passed at a Congress of the United States of America" shows where Jefferson changed imprisonments to punishments. The book, one of only three known copies, contains the first published laws of the United States, including the first printing of the Bill of Rights.
Canary explains how he plans to fix the deathbed editions of Walt Whitman's "Leaves of Grass." Canary has worked at the Lilly Library for 32 years.
Conservator Jim Canary explains how he plans to repair the binding of a book that is currently kept in a cardboard box. Canary conducts repairs in the Lilly Library’s conservation lab.
Two Gingko trees, also known as Maidenhair trees, line the sidewalk near Maxwell Hall. They can be distinguished by their fan-shaped leaves and foul-smelling fruits.
The Cutters hold their trophies after winning the men's Little 500 on Saturday, April 21, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Riders for the men's Little 500 race prepare to enter Turn 1.
Riley Figg of Bear's cycling team turns to see how close his opponents are during the Men's Little 500.
The Borg-Warner trophy for the Men's Little 500 sits on the stage in the middle of Bill Armstrong Stadium.