149 research outputs found

    Anatomy of a Shakespeare Woman : Peculiar Shakespearian Words for Parts of the Body ; Anatomy of a Shakespeare Man : Peculiar Shakespearian Words for Parts of the Body

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    12 unnumbered pages (some folded) : illustrations. Author and imprint from colophon. Publication date provided by artist. Second work on inverted pages. This book was printed by Lori Spencer on a Heidelberg Offset Press at the University of the Arts\u27 Borowsky Center for the Publication Arts. --Colophon. Two-sided book is pamphlet-stitched into a dos á dos structure with map sheets that unfold perpendicular to each other. --Catalog. Printed in black and brown inks. Dos-a-dos binding. This book is number 73 in an edition of 209. Gift of Marcia Ciro, RISD Alumna.https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_artistsbooks/1487/thumbnail.jp

    The Riso Book: Portland

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    103 unnumbered leaves . Title from publisher. Copyright Luca Antonucci and David Kasprzak --Title page. Colpa, in collaboration with Publication Studio Portland presents \u27The Riso Book: Portland\u27, the fourth installment of a traveling publication project and exhibition between Los Angeles, Marfa, San Francisco, New York, and Portland.The series standardizes the conditions of production underlying artist publications and presents the book as exhibition. \u27The Riso Book\u27, inspired by the format of Seth Siegelaub and Jack Wendler\u27s 1968 \u27Xerox Book\u27, is a geographic survey of contemporary artists with similar practices across several cities. In Portland, 5 artists will work over the course of five days at Publication Studio, using the Risograph as a tool. Each artist is given 20 pages within the monochromatic 8.5 x 11 inch book. All 100 pages will be bound into a single publication in an edition of 100, to be presented for sale at Publication Studio on Saturday, July 26th from 6-8pm. Originally created on a Xerox machine and duplicated through a lithographic process, \u27The Xerox Book\u27 afforded each artist twenty-five pages, plus a cover / title page, to execute a site specific project for the publication. The artists included were Carl Andre, Robert Barry, Douglas Huebler, Joseph Kosuth, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris and Lawrence Weiner. The publication itself functioned as the exhibition rather than a documentation of these site specific projects. \u27The Riso Book\u27 takes its name from the Risograph, a printer/duplicator manufactured in Japan. The original is scanned through the machine and a master is created, by means of tiny heat spots on a thermal plate burning voids (corresponding to image areas) in a master sheet. This master is then wrapped around a drum and ink is forced through the voids in the master. Because the Risograph uses real ink rather than toner, each image looks hand-made --Publisher\u27s website (https://www.colpapress.com/pages/the-riso-book, viewed February 22, 2017). Issued in conjunction with an exhibition held at the Publication Studio, Portland, July 20-26, 2014. First Edition, 100, July 2014 Risograph printing in green. Perfect binding.https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_artistsbooks/1236/thumbnail.jp

    Advantages of a Modular Mars Surface Habitat Approach

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    Early crewed Mars mission concepts developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) assumed a single, large habitat would house six crew members for a 500-day Mars surface stay. At the end of the first mission, all surface equipment, including the habitat, -would be abandoned and the process would be repeated at a different Martian landing site. This work was documented in a series of NASA publications culminating with the Mars Design Reference Mission 5.0 (NASA-SP-2009-566). The Evolvable Mars Campaign (EMC) explored whether re-using surface equipment at a single landing site could be more affordable than the Apollo-style explore-abandon-repeat mission cadence. Initial EMC assumptions preserved the single, monolithic habitat, the only difference being a new requirement to reuse the surface habitat for multiple expedition crews. A trade study comparing a single large habitat versus smaller, modular habitats leaned towards the monolithic approach as more mass-efficient. More recent work has focused on the operational aspects of building up Mars surface infrastructure over multiple missions, and has identified compelling advantages of the modular approach that should be considered before making a final decision. This paper explores Mars surface mission operational concepts and integrated system analysis, and presents an argument for the modular habitat approach

    Catalog of federal metrology and calibration capabilities /

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    "September 1980."Mode of access: Internet

    Opening the doors to better buildings : choices for the building community /

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    Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet

    Microelectronic ultrasonic bonding /

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    "CODEN: XNBSAV."Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet

    Selected topics on hydrogen fuel /

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    Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet
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