ROTTLACE
2016
Matter
Photopolymers
Media
Data-driven material modelling &
3D-printing
Design iterations
o f t h e R o t t l a c e m a s k u s i n g
generative algorithms
Icelandic singer-songwriter
Björk wearing the Rottlace mask.
As in the human body, where
continuous, collagenous elements
alter their chemical and mechanical
p r o p e r t i e s a s a f u n c t i o n o f t h e
tension they exert or endure, each
mask is designed as a synthetic
‘whole without parts’
Photography: Santiago Felipe.
C o u r t e s y o f N e r i O x m a n a n d
The Mediated Matter Group,
MIT Media Lab
SYNOPSIS
R o t t l a c e i s a f a m i l y o f m a s k s
designed for Icelandic singer-
s o n g w r i t e r B j ö r k. I n s p i r e d b y
Björk’s Vulnicura album, The
Mediated Matter Group explored
themes associated with self-healing
and expressing ‘the face without
a skin’. The series originates
with a mask that emulates Björk’s
facial structure and concludes with
a mask that reveals a new identity,
independent of its origin. What
o r i g i n a t e s a s a f o r m o f p o r t r a i t u r e
culminates in reincarnation.
DESCRIPTION
T h e m a s k s’ d e s i g n i s i n f o r m e d
by the geometrical and material
l o g i c s t h a t u n d e r l i e t h e h u m a n
musculoskeletal system;
specifically, the complex structure
of muscles, connective tissues,
tendons, and ligaments that
modulate the human voice. This
continuous weave of dense collagen
fibres form functional ‘typologies’
of connections: muscle-to-bone,
bone-to-bone, and muscle-to-muscle.
As in the human body, where
continuous, collagenous elements
alter their chemical and mechanical
p r o p e r t i e s a s a f u n c t i o n o f t h e
tension they exert or endure, each
mask is designed as a synthetic
‘whole without parts’. The masks
incorporate tunable physical
properties recapitulating,
augmenting, or controlling the
f a c i a l f o r m a n d m o v e m e n t b e h i n d
them. Inspired by their biological
counterpart, and conceived as
‘muscle textile’, the masks are
bundled, multimaterial structures,
providing formal and structural
integrity, as well as movement,
to the face and neck.
One of the masks from the series
was selected for Björk’s stage
performance at the Tokyo Miraikan
Museum, and 3D-printed by Stratasys
using multimaterial 3D-printing.
This process enables the production
of elaborate combinations of graded
properties distributed over
geometrically complex structures
within a single object. The project
implements Stratasys’ Connex3
technology using three materials
with pre-set mechanical
combinations varying in rigidity,
opacity, and colour, as a function
of geometrical, structural,
and physiological constraints.
B u i l d i n g o n p r e v i o u s p r o j e c t s
created in collaboration with
Stratasys (including Vespers, see
page 316, and Wanderers, see page
318), Rottlace is similarly printed
as a single, multifunctional
material system, composed of rigid
materials combined with nano-
enhanced, elastomeric structures.
The intricate fibrous tissue is
made of soft and flexible materials
designed to accommodate facial
movement. Continuous property
transitions – ranging from stiff
bone-like structures to semi-
flexible ligament-like structures,
to flexible fibre-based connective
tissue structures – are
computationally generated and
digitally fabricated, using Björk’s
f a c i a l s c a n – o b t a i n e d a s p o i n t
cloud data. The computational
framework enables micron-scale
control of 3D-printable material
placement over highly complex
geometric domains. This, in turn,
enables the design and 3D-printing
of complex, large-scale objects
with continuous variations of
modulus and transparency, within
a single build. The properties
of each mask include a number of
length-scales, informing their
mechanical properties and
behaviour: on the centimetre scale,
the 3D-printed musculoskeleton
is designed to allow for flexible
movement, while providing integrity
to, and support of, its overall
form; on the millimetre scale, the
fusing and parting of fibres with
varying material compositions
enables the overall structure to
be self-supporting; and lastly, on
the micron scale, material droplets
are placed, diffused, and spatially
aggregated to provide continuous
material variation within a single
‘muscle-skin’ object.
CREDITS
Research and design by The Mediated
Matter Group in collaboration
with Stratasys, NYU LaGuardia
Studio, Taylor Absher and Blair
Simmons. Mediated Matter
researchers include Christoph
Bader, Dominik Kolb, and group
director Neri Oxman.
∑ 327
Neri Oxman