Can we programme a tree?

Alberitmus

Teresa Carretta

In a bare and dry world, where trees have slowly shrunk and wrinkled, crushed and deformed until they disappear, and the wind no longer echoes among the ancient forests, man has had to overcome the imminent extinction with what in the first place helped to create it: technology. The Alboritmus, dated 2507 A.D., was born to repopulate the earth. This set of trees programmed and then printed with organic material are part of the new Digitalis Arboris family. It is not reduced to a single type of vegetation but represents a system that can reproduce infinite varieties of shrubs, bushes, and flowers.

A project made in the course

Things that talk

The course aims to provide tools and method for the graphic design of the image for publishing through field research and the creation of prototypes. Design is mainly intended as narrative, as the ability to reconstruct a logical narrative structure starting from a reasoned combination of acquired elements. We are submerged by an immense quantity of images that are increasingly strident, disharmonious, screamed, multiform and disrespectful; they multiply daily, impose themselves everywhere and take possession of our lives, condition our choices. When there is too much to see, we end up seeing nothing and paradoxically to see better we need to close our eyes.
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