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Laser cutters and 3D printers revive century-old a magic lantern show of Erewhon at the Edinburgh Fringe

Erewhon Revisited in 90 seconds

James Coutts writes, “Indiana University Victorian Studies PhD candidate Mary Borgo Ton assembled an international group of artists/makers, a media archaeologist, laser cutters and 3D printers to create magic lantern slides that have not been made in 100 years for a show running in the Edinburgh Festival Fringe called Erewhon: “An antique magic lantern projector, an iPhone and a live musical score shine a new light on Samuel Butler’s classic sci-fi novel. A Victorian explorer discovers a colony of refugees; time travellers from the 21st century escaping their dependence on its technology. This delightful neo-historical head-scratcher playfully welds future, past and present into a glittering bracelet of time.”

The slides in Erewhon are animated by 3D-printed gears and laser-cut acrylic embedded in laser-cut wooden frame. Tinkercad, a free 3D modeling software, helped Mary to prototype early versions of the rackwork mechanism on using UITS’s Ultimaker.

Lasers and plastics and slides, oh my! [Mary Borgo Ton/Magnetic North]

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