海角直播 Student Artists Show Off their 鈥楻obotic鈥 Side
Publish Date: June 22, 2021
Organizers of a campus-wide Robotics and Robotic Art Competition have announced its winners: Midori Schardein, Marlena Camarena, and Eve Riggs.
The three Roadrunners will each take home a cash prize 鈥 including a top prize of $500 鈥 and bragging rights.
Each participating student brought their own interpretation to the competition鈥檚 overall theme, which asked artists to expand their creative side by melding together robotics and art.
The competition 鈥 which began in early March 鈥 was planned as part of a campus- wide spring semester focus on the book Spare Parts, by Joshua Davis. Based on a true underdog story, the book follows four undocumented Latino teenagers from Arizona and their participation in the 2004 Marine Advanced Technology Education Robotics Competition at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Events highlighting the book were launched earlier this year and included chapter discussions, an essay competition, and even an afternoon with OscarVasquez,one of the teens in the book. The Robotics and Robotic Art Competition carried over the theme of robotics. Camarena鈥檚 piece titled, 鈥淩obots Become
Human,鈥 placed first the event鈥檚 Art Category. It explores the idea of robotics鈥 advancement in the medical field,particularly how 鈥渁dvanced bionics and biotechnology will change the world as we know it,鈥 she explained.
鈥淚鈥檝e always been fascinated with robots,鈥 she said. 鈥淪eeing robotics in science fiction films and seeing how they can help in the medicalfieldiswhatinspiredmetobecome a biomedical engineer. I truly believe that bionics is the future of the medical industry.鈥
Riggs 鈥 who placed in second in the same category 鈥 went a different route by paying homage to one of science fiction鈥檚 most beloved 鈥淪tar Wars鈥 characters, C-3PO.
鈥淭his robot is fluent in more than seven million forms of communication,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a robot that many children have watched growing up and inspires many young engineers. I hope to walk the earth with a robot like C-3PO one day.鈥
Schardein took an entirely different approach for her untitled piece by using visions of nature during the COVID-19 pandemic as inspiration. She explained that it was while being able to 鈥渂reak free from the confines鈥 of her home that she was able to connect differently to the beauty around her.
鈥淲hile I normally work in the digital and 2D atmosphere, I wanted to challenge myself with creating an object that represented the space where technology and nature intersect,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y piece is a step towards recreating [in a robot] the movement seen in a hummingbird pollinatingflowers,muchliketheonesIsee in my backyard daily.
鈥淓ven though robots are still commonly viewed as futuristic technology, I think we are constantly trying to recreate the things we know in the world around us,鈥 she continued.鈥淲e keep coming up with ways to make more 鈥榥atural鈥 and 鈥榟uman-like鈥 figures to better understand the unknown.鈥
Camarena and Riggs received $300 and $200 for their Robotics Art, respectively, while Schardein鈥檚 first place win in the Robot/Mechanized Art Category scored her a $500 prize.
To learn more about the event and its requirements, visit www.craftonhills.edu/features/one-book-one-college/robotics-competition.php
