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26 Foot Long Boat 3D Printed In 100,000 Different Pieces 58

First time accepted submitter Talk Prizes writes Hung-Chih Peng, a Taiwanese artist, has decided to 3D print a boat measuring 26 feet in length. The piece, called "The Deluge – Noah's Ark" is a twisted wrecked boat which he had to 3D print in 100,000 different pieces and then glue it all together. "...The Deluge is Peng’s way of showing the inability that humans have exhibited in rectifying uncontrollable catastrophic challenges. Climate change, ecological crises, and environmental pollution are all changes that this planet is facing, yet seemingly humans do not have a way to correct these problems. The work is meant as a metaphor for showing the battle being waged by Mother Nature on the accelerated development of industrialized civilization."
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26 Foot Long Boat 3D Printed In 100,000 Different Pieces

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  • I see now (Score:5, Funny)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Sunday December 21, 2014 @06:21PM (#48648733)

    The work is meant as a metaphor for showing the battle being waged by Mother Nature on the accelerated development of industrialized civilization."

        Ah, so he's an idiot.

    • by Etherwalk ( 681268 ) on Sunday December 21, 2014 @06:44PM (#48648847)

      The work is meant as a metaphor for showing the battle being waged by Mother Nature on the accelerated development of industrialized civilization."

          Ah, so he's an idiot.

      Nah, he has just decided to fight for the environment... by printing lots and lots of plastic.

    • by denzacar ( 181829 ) on Sunday December 21, 2014 @07:27PM (#48649095) Journal

      His statements in TFA are a collection of fallacies and nonsense.
      Navel gazing until you start seeing the world through your own ass is not art. Ask any proctologist.

      "Human beings are unable to return to the unspoiled living environment of the past, and have become victims of their own endeavors. In the biblical time, Noah's Ark is the last resort for humans to escape from the termination of the world. However, if Noah's Ark sinks, where is the hope of the human race? If Noah's Ark, a symbol of mankind salvation, becomes just as a shipwreck, human and nonhuman were placed in an equal position. Human subject is losing his predominance as the supreme center of the world." ...
      "It is certain that, no matter what circumstance will turn out, there will certainly be a disaster beforehand," explains Peng. "Destruction and construction always grow and demise together. We will once again encounter the problem of moral degeneration."

      And the author of the article seems to be in the same category of faux-thinkers.

      It depicts a time when the Anthropocene period (a period when human activities have/had significant global impact on Earthâ(TM)s ecosystems), is replaced by the Mechanocene period when machinery begins taking over some of the jobs.

    • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

      an idiot

      An idiot that funded a room full of 3D printers with a sop to "climate change."

    • Re:I see now (Score:5, Insightful)

      by radtea ( 464814 ) on Monday December 22, 2014 @01:16AM (#48650339)

      Ah, so he's an idiot.

      Pretty much. He seems unaware of the huge selection bias--and logical contradiction--implied by the claim about "the inability that humans have exhibited in rectifying uncontrollable catastrophic challenges"

      We've dealt with a huge number of challenges successfully, but a pretentious git like this would never even be aware of them, so his estimate of our track-record is off by light years.

      Bacterial disease: rectified.

      Unwanted pregnancy: rectified.

      Polio: rectified.

      Smallpox: rectified.

      Growing enough food to feed ourselves: rectified.

      And so on.

      Sure there are hard problems left. They will be solved by engineers, scientists, bureaucrats and businesspeople willing to take risks and test ideas by publicly testing them via systematic observation, controlled experiment and Bayesian inference, not pretentious gits telling us how awful we all are.

  • How will he put all the animals in that boat if it be only 26 feet long - honestly does he have a shrink ray handy?
  • That's weird spending so much time making something that's already wrecked.
    • Ohh it's suppose to look like that? I just thought he was still working on the calibration of the 3d printers.

  • So he used plastics and high tech to create more global warming problems to demonstrate his opposition to man's developments and climate change.

    Interesting rationalization. I would have a lot more respect for him if he threw away all his worldly belongings and went and sat in the forest for a year eating nothing.

    • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Sunday December 21, 2014 @07:12PM (#48649005)

      You can't sit in a forest for a year without eating nothing. At some point, you're going to lie down instead of sitting.

      On the upside, at some point you're going to stop using oxygen and later on you will become compost, so I guess that's good for the environment.

      • by aXis100 ( 690904 )

        Maybe he used PLA, a common 3D printing material. This is made from corn or dextrose.

        • That could be the case. Everyone here seems to assumes "plastic = bad", you'd think nerds would know that 3D printers can use other plastics than ABS.

      • by pubwvj ( 1045960 )

        "You can't sit in a forest for a year without eating nothing."

        Yes... that was rather the point. Think.

  • It's too bad the creator had to ruin it by opening his mouth. Any 'Art' that makes it's statement with a bunch of words next to it generally isn't art. It's glued together junk that's not aesthetically appealing. This guy actually made something neat and arguably pretty, then made sure we all knew his talents started with, and ended with, this sort of work.
  • C'mon... if they're going to name something that, it should really be 450 feet long, shouldn't it?
  • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Monday December 22, 2014 @04:22AM (#48650717) Homepage

    26 Foot Long Boat

    No, it's a 26 foot long sculpture.

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