> As I recall talking to Joseph Wu, following a diagram to fold origami is like 
> painting by number.  Doing origami however, is about putting a bit of 
> yourself into the work. And I don’t think a machine can do that.

Totally!

It’s been an open question in generative, computational art for some time now. 
Can a system make creative decisions? The current consensus (for sake of 
simplicity of the argument) is that a good system can be a good design 
“collaborator” but in the end humans are making the judgement. Although 
evolutionary models are capable of making decisions based on criteria, humans 
are still defining and coding the criteria. 

Having done some work in fold automation and fabrication it’s an interesting 
idea, but still kind of far-fetched that a machine could even come close to 
human dexterity for origami. Sure, Devin Balkcom and some other teams have made 
origami making robots, but they are *very* limited.

The real frontier is scale, below what a human could ever fold. The 
self-folding Micro scale stuff is cutting edge, though mostly “kirigami” in 
style. 

We’ve got many years of reigning large over paper. We are “digital” origamists 
after all. Pun intended :D

Best, Matthew 

Reply via email to