The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Haase, Emma Leigh
Data de Publicação: 2022
Tipo de documento: Dissertação
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/146164
Resumo: Working as an artist and utilizing exact science as a part of my process creates an opportunity for a comparison between the two ways of knowing. The process of developing scientific research and making artwork are often thought of as incomparable. However, when I go deeper into each process, for me, they really are not so different from each other. This research will go into depth with these two processes, attempt to knock down some of their barriers and investigate how they influence each other. My own investigations in the overlap of art and science will be highlighted, attempting to answer different questions about how my process of art making and scientific processes influence each other. Scientific research seems to pair well with my artistic process. Often, repetition of form is a central part of my artwork. This creates a natural test subject. As I make more pieces, I can build up the components needed for my art and use each piece to ask and answer scientific research questions. The repetitive object in my current work is a vertebra; the individual pieces that make up our spines. To make a full piece that recreates a spine, many of these vertebrae need to be made using the kiln casting technique. Adequate glass flow into the mold cavities at casting temperature presented some specific technical challenges. This sparked questions about the glass and about what happens inside the molds at high temperatures; “How do thermal properties and composition of glass influence castability?” a potentially scientific question asked by an artist for a work of art. Allowing this technical question to occupy a prominent position in my art making is one of the ways in which my artistic process intersects a scientific one. To seek answers to my questions and allow scientific research to continue to inspire my work, controlled procedures were designed and implemented. The idea of this research was not just to understand how a single type of glass reacts at high temperatures but how several glasses compare to one another and to better understand how different glass compositions can affect their thermal behavior. These analyses and tests' main focus were on mixed alkaline silicate recycled glass donated from the Atlantis Vista Alegre factory in Alcobaça, Portugal. Reusing glass in casting and any form of art offers some sustainable advantages, especially now, as several regulations are being applied to glass making factories worldwide to reduce the amount of energy they use. By studying the recycled glasses, it provides valuable information and knowledge for their use in art-making applications. To explore glass modifications that occur during heating by using the kiln casting technique, the composition and thermal properties of several commercial soda-lime silicate glasses were studied including Atlantis glass, Glasma glass, System 96 glass and recycled window float glass. These glasses were analyzed using different techniques such as Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Energy-dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) and Dilatometry. The glasses with different compositions were cast into a cone-shaped mold to study their flow behavior, understand how the top temperatures affect surface texture, and to analyze the formation of stress in the glass. With these results, optimization of a casting schedule for each of the glasses was performed. Creating scientific research around an artistic problem greatly influenced my artwork and moreover, the creative process. In past artistic research, I felt that an answer was quickly put together when a question arose and the problem was resolved. It was a onetime solution, and the problem would certainly arise again in another aspect of my work. However, allowing scientific research and the knowledge it provides to take a prominent role, including analyses of thermal properties and composition, I was allowed to slow down and think through more than just my previous knowledge, but a combination of new and previous findings. The difference in research, from artistic to the addition of scientific, is laid out in this writing, where you have the opportunity to see how I am solving problems at the beginning of my research and with time understand what needs to change. Scientific research is added to my artistic endeavors. These results may benefit others on a similar path of creativity.
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spelling The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutionsDomínio/Área Científica::Engenharia e Tecnologia::Outras Engenharias e TecnologiasWorking as an artist and utilizing exact science as a part of my process creates an opportunity for a comparison between the two ways of knowing. The process of developing scientific research and making artwork are often thought of as incomparable. However, when I go deeper into each process, for me, they really are not so different from each other. This research will go into depth with these two processes, attempt to knock down some of their barriers and investigate how they influence each other. My own investigations in the overlap of art and science will be highlighted, attempting to answer different questions about how my process of art making and scientific processes influence each other. Scientific research seems to pair well with my artistic process. Often, repetition of form is a central part of my artwork. This creates a natural test subject. As I make more pieces, I can build up the components needed for my art and use each piece to ask and answer scientific research questions. The repetitive object in my current work is a vertebra; the individual pieces that make up our spines. To make a full piece that recreates a spine, many of these vertebrae need to be made using the kiln casting technique. Adequate glass flow into the mold cavities at casting temperature presented some specific technical challenges. This sparked questions about the glass and about what happens inside the molds at high temperatures; “How do thermal properties and composition of glass influence castability?” a potentially scientific question asked by an artist for a work of art. Allowing this technical question to occupy a prominent position in my art making is one of the ways in which my artistic process intersects a scientific one. To seek answers to my questions and allow scientific research to continue to inspire my work, controlled procedures were designed and implemented. The idea of this research was not just to understand how a single type of glass reacts at high temperatures but how several glasses compare to one another and to better understand how different glass compositions can affect their thermal behavior. These analyses and tests' main focus were on mixed alkaline silicate recycled glass donated from the Atlantis Vista Alegre factory in Alcobaça, Portugal. Reusing glass in casting and any form of art offers some sustainable advantages, especially now, as several regulations are being applied to glass making factories worldwide to reduce the amount of energy they use. By studying the recycled glasses, it provides valuable information and knowledge for their use in art-making applications. To explore glass modifications that occur during heating by using the kiln casting technique, the composition and thermal properties of several commercial soda-lime silicate glasses were studied including Atlantis glass, Glasma glass, System 96 glass and recycled window float glass. These glasses were analyzed using different techniques such as Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Energy-dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) and Dilatometry. The glasses with different compositions were cast into a cone-shaped mold to study their flow behavior, understand how the top temperatures affect surface texture, and to analyze the formation of stress in the glass. With these results, optimization of a casting schedule for each of the glasses was performed. Creating scientific research around an artistic problem greatly influenced my artwork and moreover, the creative process. In past artistic research, I felt that an answer was quickly put together when a question arose and the problem was resolved. It was a onetime solution, and the problem would certainly arise again in another aspect of my work. However, allowing scientific research and the knowledge it provides to take a prominent role, including analyses of thermal properties and composition, I was allowed to slow down and think through more than just my previous knowledge, but a combination of new and previous findings. The difference in research, from artistic to the addition of scientific, is laid out in this writing, where you have the opportunity to see how I am solving problems at the beginning of my research and with time understand what needs to change. Scientific research is added to my artistic endeavors. These results may benefit others on a similar path of creativity.Trabalhar como artista e utilizar a ciência exata como parte do meu processo cria uma oportunidade para uma comparação entre as duas formas de saber. O processo de desenvolvimento de pesquisa científica e de produção de obras de arte é frequentemente considerado como incomparável. No entanto, quando aprofundo cada processo, para mim, estes realmente não são tão diferentes um do outro. Esta pesquisa vai aprofundar estes dois processos, vai tentar derrubar algumas barreiras e investigar como estes se influenciam mutuamente. A minha pesquisa na sobreposição de arte e ciência será destacada, tentando responder a diferentes questões sobre como o meu processo de criar arte e os processos científicos se influenciam um ao outro. A pesquisa científica parece coincidir bem com o meu processo artístico. Normalmente, a repetição da forma é uma parte central na minha arte. Este aspecto cria um caso de estudo natural. À medida que faço mais peças, posso construir os componentes necessários para a minha arte e usar cada peça para fazer e responder a perguntas de pesquisa científica. O objeto repetitivo no meu trabalho atual é uma vértebra; as peças individuais que compõem a nossa coluna vertebral. Para fazer uma peça completa que recrie uma coluna vertebral, muitas destas vértebras precisam de ser feitas usando a técnica de fusão no forno. O fluxo adequado de vidro nas cavidades do molde na temperatura de fusão apresentou alguns desafios técnicos específicos. Isto gerou dúvidas sobre o vidro e sobre o que acontece dentro dos moldes em altas temperaturas; “Como é que as propriedades térmicas e a composição do vidro influenciam a capacidade de enchimento do molde?” uma pergunta potencialmente científica feita por um artista para uma obra de arte. Permitir que esta questão técnica ocupe um lugar de destaque no meu modo de fazer artístico é uma das formas pelas quais o meu processo artístico se cruza com o científico. Para procurar respostas às minhas perguntas e permitir que a pesquisa científica continue a inspirar o meu trabalho, projectaram-se e implementaram-se procedimentos controlados. A ideia deste estudo não era foi apenas compreender como um único tipo de vidro reage a altas temperaturas, mas como vários vidros se comparam entre si e entender melhor como diferentes composições de vidro podem afetar o seu comportamento térmico. O foco principal destas análises e testes foi em vidro reciclado de composição alcalina mista, doado da fábrica Atlantis Vista Alegre® em Alcobaça, Portugal. O reaproveitamento em qualquer forma de arte oferece algumas vantagens sustentáveis, especialmente agora, já que vários regulamentos estão a ser aplicados às fábricas de vidro em todo o mundo para reduzir a quantidade de energia utilizada. Ao estudar os vidros reciclados, obtêm-se informações e conhecimentos valiosos para a sua utilização em aplicações artísticas. Para explorar as modificações do vidro que ocorrem durante a fusão do vidro no forno, a composição e as propriedades térmicas de vários vidros silicatados-sodo-cálcicos comerciais foram estudados, incluindo vidro Atlantis, vidro Glasma, vidro System 96 e vidro de janela reciclado. Estes vidros foram analisados por diferentes técnicas analíticas, como a Calorimetria Diferencial de Varrimento (DSC), Fluorescência de Raios-X Dispersiva de Energias (EDXRF) e Dilatometria. Os vidros com diferentes composições foram fundidos num molde em forma de cone para estudar o seu fluxo, compreender como as temperaturas elevadas afetam a textura da superfície e para analisar a formação de tensões no vidro. Com esses resultados, foi realizada a otimização de uma curva de aquecimento para cada um dos vidros. A pesquisa científica em torno de um problema artístico influenciou muito a minha arte e, além disso, o processo criativo. Nas pesquisas artísticas anteriores, senti que uma resposta foi rapidamente formulada quando uma pergunta surgiu e o problema foi resolvido. Embora o problema tivesse deixado de existir, a resposta era algo que não poderia repetir. No entanto, ao permitir que o conhecimento adquirido através do processo científico assumissem um papel proeminente, incluindo o estudo da composição e de propriedades térmicas, tive oportunidade de desacelerar e pensar em mais aspectos do que apenas no meu conhecimento anterior, fazendo uma combinação de descobertas novas e anteriores. Neste trabalho a combinação entre a investigação cientifica e artística é obtida através da forma em que proponho resolver os problemas identificados, nas primeiras experiências. Acada fusão, o meu processo cognitivo é mais cuidado e utilizo mais tempo para compreender o que precisa de ser alterado. A pesquisa científica é adicionada aos meus esforços artísticos. Estes resultados podem beneficiar outras pessoas num caminho semelhante de criatividade.Ruivo, AndreiaWiley III, RobertRUNHaase, Emma Leigh2022-12-13T11:24:54Z2022-022022-02-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10362/146164enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2024-03-11T05:27:13Zoai:run.unl.pt:10362/146164Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-20T03:52:31.385554Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
title The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
spellingShingle The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
Haase, Emma Leigh
Domínio/Área Científica::Engenharia e Tecnologia::Outras Engenharias e Tecnologias
title_short The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
title_full The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
title_fullStr The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
title_full_unstemmed The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
title_sort The Glass Vertebrae. Discovering kiln cast solutions
author Haase, Emma Leigh
author_facet Haase, Emma Leigh
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Ruivo, Andreia
Wiley III, Robert
RUN
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Haase, Emma Leigh
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Domínio/Área Científica::Engenharia e Tecnologia::Outras Engenharias e Tecnologias
topic Domínio/Área Científica::Engenharia e Tecnologia::Outras Engenharias e Tecnologias
description Working as an artist and utilizing exact science as a part of my process creates an opportunity for a comparison between the two ways of knowing. The process of developing scientific research and making artwork are often thought of as incomparable. However, when I go deeper into each process, for me, they really are not so different from each other. This research will go into depth with these two processes, attempt to knock down some of their barriers and investigate how they influence each other. My own investigations in the overlap of art and science will be highlighted, attempting to answer different questions about how my process of art making and scientific processes influence each other. Scientific research seems to pair well with my artistic process. Often, repetition of form is a central part of my artwork. This creates a natural test subject. As I make more pieces, I can build up the components needed for my art and use each piece to ask and answer scientific research questions. The repetitive object in my current work is a vertebra; the individual pieces that make up our spines. To make a full piece that recreates a spine, many of these vertebrae need to be made using the kiln casting technique. Adequate glass flow into the mold cavities at casting temperature presented some specific technical challenges. This sparked questions about the glass and about what happens inside the molds at high temperatures; “How do thermal properties and composition of glass influence castability?” a potentially scientific question asked by an artist for a work of art. Allowing this technical question to occupy a prominent position in my art making is one of the ways in which my artistic process intersects a scientific one. To seek answers to my questions and allow scientific research to continue to inspire my work, controlled procedures were designed and implemented. The idea of this research was not just to understand how a single type of glass reacts at high temperatures but how several glasses compare to one another and to better understand how different glass compositions can affect their thermal behavior. These analyses and tests' main focus were on mixed alkaline silicate recycled glass donated from the Atlantis Vista Alegre factory in Alcobaça, Portugal. Reusing glass in casting and any form of art offers some sustainable advantages, especially now, as several regulations are being applied to glass making factories worldwide to reduce the amount of energy they use. By studying the recycled glasses, it provides valuable information and knowledge for their use in art-making applications. To explore glass modifications that occur during heating by using the kiln casting technique, the composition and thermal properties of several commercial soda-lime silicate glasses were studied including Atlantis glass, Glasma glass, System 96 glass and recycled window float glass. These glasses were analyzed using different techniques such as Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), Energy-dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) and Dilatometry. The glasses with different compositions were cast into a cone-shaped mold to study their flow behavior, understand how the top temperatures affect surface texture, and to analyze the formation of stress in the glass. With these results, optimization of a casting schedule for each of the glasses was performed. Creating scientific research around an artistic problem greatly influenced my artwork and moreover, the creative process. In past artistic research, I felt that an answer was quickly put together when a question arose and the problem was resolved. It was a onetime solution, and the problem would certainly arise again in another aspect of my work. However, allowing scientific research and the knowledge it provides to take a prominent role, including analyses of thermal properties and composition, I was allowed to slow down and think through more than just my previous knowledge, but a combination of new and previous findings. The difference in research, from artistic to the addition of scientific, is laid out in this writing, where you have the opportunity to see how I am solving problems at the beginning of my research and with time understand what needs to change. Scientific research is added to my artistic endeavors. These results may benefit others on a similar path of creativity.
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