ARCHIVED NEWS
Quark Park sparks playful collaborations between engineers and artists
Posted Oct. 15, 2006 by Teresa Riordan
Five engineering faculty members were among ten Princeton University scientists
who teamed up with local sculptors, architects and landscape architects to
create the phenomenon known as Quark
Park.
Located in downtown Princeton, the park features playful garden sculptures
that evoke the serious research that the scientists do.
The park was created by landscape architects Alan Goodheart and Peter Soderman
and architect Kevin Wilkes. Two years ago the threesome created another temporary
park at the same location -- on Paul Robeson Place -- called “Writers
Block,” a collection of garden follies inspired by the work of 11 writers.
This time around, Soderman told the Princeton Weekly Bulletin, “science
was the obvious choice because there are so many scientists in Princeton and
most scientists are relative aliens to the lay public. People don’t understand
what scientists do.”
The five engineering faculty members with pieces in the garden are Perry Cook,
professor of computer science; David Dobkin, dean of the faculty and professor
of computer science; Naomi Leonard, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering;
George Scherer, professor of civil and environmental engineering; and Jim Sturm,
professor of electrical engineering and the director of the Princeton Institute
for the Science and Technology of Materials.
Scroll down to see photos of their collaborations.

To create this sculpture, artist Nancy Cohen collaborated with Jim
Sturm, professor of electrical engineering, and Shirley M. Tilghman,
president of Princeton University and professor of molecular biology. The
piece, seen here illuminated at night, is an abstract representation of the
how mammals sense smell and remember scents.

George
Scherer, professor of civil and environmental engineering, collaborated
with sculptor Kate Graves to create a stone table that incorporates a board
for the African game of Mankala. Scherer has created a website
and slide show explaining the materials science that drove the design
of the sculpture, including a built-in experiment that may cause one leg
to crumble, and providing a behind-the-scenes glimpse of how the stone table
came into being.

Perry
Cook collaborated with sculptor Jonathan Shor to create a giant
granite xylophone. When the xylophone is played (the metal bars at left serve
as the hammers), a microphone picks up the vibrations and sends them to a
box containing some simple digital signal processing equipment that adds
delays and reverb to the xylophone sounds as they are being played.
Cook has composed a musical
interpretation of Shor’s breaking of the granite as the xylophone
sculpture was being created.

Naomi Ehrich Leonard collaborated
with glass artist Bob Kuster to create “Motion
in the Ocean” an installation that metaphorically represents Leonard’s
work in feedback. Inspired by the movement of schools of fish, Leonard has
developed a mathematical system that allows robotic gliders to self-choreograph
their movements in response to their environment.

David
Dobkin collaborated with architect Kevin Wilkes to design the outdoor
theater and roof covering at Quark Park. The truss system and the shapes
it contains were inspired by the use of triangles as the basic element in
rendering complex shapes in computer graphics, which is Dobkin’s research
specialty.
(All photos by Denise Applewhite, except Dobkin-Wilkes photo by Cie Stroud.)
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