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N-Bowl
This is a N-Bowl. It was designed by Ammar Kalo. It is dated 2015 and we acquired it in 2016. Its medium is robotically-formed brass. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
The N-Bowl celebrates an advanced fabrication method and represents a new direction in metalwork. Designed by Ammar Kalo in 2015, this bowl exploits and gives visible form to the use of the new digital tools that made it. The bowl was produced through robotic incremental sheet metal forming, a process that Kalo re-appropriated from an existing experimental industrial technique, whereby a forming tool attached to a robotic arm moves along a programmed path, stretching the metal into the shape of a bowl. Kalo is also exploring using this technology to produce cladding structures for buildings. The surface texture on the metal shows the marks of the toolpaths, seen here in pronounced radial lines and concentric circles. In metalwork, a field in which the maker’s hand has traditionally been valued, the N-Bowl introduces a new maker and a new mark in the form of the robot and its tool. True to its parametric design, the bowl can be produced in continuous and unique variations.
This object was
donated by
Ammar Kalo.
It is credited Courtesy of Ammar Kalo.
- Flower-Shaped Vase Vase
- favrile glass.
- Museum purchase through gift of Georgiana L. McClellan.
- 1956-66-1
- Model No. 5905-20 Flower Floater/candle Holder
- glass.
- Gift of Ashley Dawn Brown.
- 2000-16-1
- Covered Bowl from "Town and Country" Service Bowl And Lid
- earthenware.
- Gift of Mel Byars, The Mel Byars Collection of 20th Century Design.
- 1990-15-14-a,b
Our curators have highlighted 1 object that are related to this one.
- Bowl Bowl
- silver.
- Gift of Anonymous Donor.
- 1967-48-115
Its dimensions are
H x diam.: 5.7 × 20.3 cm (2 1/4 in. × 8 in.)
Cite this object as
N-Bowl; Designed by Ammar Kalo (Canadian, b. 1985); robotically-formed brass; H x diam.: 5.7 × 20.3 cm (2 1/4 in. × 8 in.); Courtesy of Ammar Kalo; 2016-26-2
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition Making | Breaking: New Arrivals.