3D Printers Make Art for Future Robots

Financial Equation, by Ashley Zelinskie. The three lines of the triangle do not actually meet but create a three-dimensional illusion called the impossible triangle.
(Image credit: Ashley Zelinskie)

NEW YORK — A sculpture of the golden ratio, a computer-coded painting of the "Mona Lisa" and a chair made out of hexadecimal codes are just some of the mathematically inspired art presented by one innovator this weekend at the World Maker Faire.

In her project, called "Reverse Abstraction," Brooklyn-based artist Ashley Zelinskie used 3D printing to create sculptures made of binary and hexadecimal codes, the series of digits that a computer uses to process information. The numbers may look like pure abstraction to the human mind, but they make up a computer's "language."

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Bahar Gholipour
Staff Writer
Bahar Gholipour is a staff reporter for Live Science covering neuroscience, odd medical cases and all things health. She holds a Master of Science degree in neuroscience from the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in Paris, and has done graduate-level work in science journalism at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She has worked as a research assistant at the Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives at ENS.