17 July 2006
Folding art into science!
BOOK NOW for the Great Origami Maths and Science Show touring NZ in August 2006
Say the word ‘origami’ to most people and they will picture sharply creased models of birds, fish or frogs. But say it
to Jonathan Baxter and Hugh Gribben, and they will tell you their origami is both a performance art and a science!
These two master paper-folders have worked their way through a sheer mountain of paper as they prepare for the New
Zealand tour of their uniquely titled Great Origami Maths and Science Show.
As secondary teachers around the country start planning how to engage the enquiring minds of their maths and science
students in Term 3, Jonathan and Hugh are offering up to them the ultimate maths class field trip – a one hour journey
into the realms of a new field of origami – origami maths.
If this all sounds a bit obscure, try googling the words science, maths and origami - you’ll end up with half a millions
hits and range of weird and wonderful websites that explore the application of origami in engineering, math and
technology. It appears the ancient sculptural art form of origami has undergone a 21st century makeover! Across the
globe, mathematicians and engineers with a fondness for origami have applied the rigour of scientific discipline to
their hobby and yielded some fascinating results.
Origamists are now able to fold, from a single, uncut square of paper, objects where no sheet of paper has gone before;
and are able to portray levels of realism and expression never seen in the art form’s lengthy history.
The simple and stylized animals of the past, which relied as much on the viewer's imagination as on the folder's skill,
have been joined by bugs and beasts bristling with anatomically correct legs and teeth. Some folders are exploring new
subject matter, such as elaborate cuckoo clocks or working Swiss army knives. Others venture into the abstract world of
mathematics, assembling spectacular interlocking polyhedra or tile mosaics, or defying straight-line geometry to sculpt
graceful curves.
Professor Robert Lang, international advisor to the Origami Show and a laser physicist from Pleasanton, California, has
been a key player in moving origami into the electronic age. Author of a computer program called TreeMaker, he can take
any stick figure outline and calculate a pattern of creases that will produce that figure. This enabled him to create
origami animals that were considered impossible years ago and pioneer a new field of mathematics called “computational
origami” (the solution of origami problems by mathematical means).
Origami can also be found in a range of everyday items. The folds in the top of a milk carton – origami. The way vehicle
airbags are neatly squirreled away inside the driving column of your car – origami technology. The incredible way artery
stents used in coronary surgery unfold inside the body – origami mechanism. Roadmaps - surely there must be a better way
to fold them that makes them easier to return to their flattened state? Origamists are working on that one too and may
soon have some answers for us!
Clearly there is so much more to origami than just paper folding!
Thanks to support from the Royal Society of New Zealand, the Great Origami Maths and Science Show will visit a town near
you in August 2006. Come and explore with these expert paperfolders, just how much maths and science is tucked away in
the creases of an origami model. Book now as venues are selling out fast!
For more information, teacher resources and booking details visit http://www.nzamt.org.nz/origami.htm.
[insert local venue details from below as required]
ENDS
LOCAL VENUE DETAILS: THE GREAT ORIGAMI MATHS AND SCIENCE SHOW:
Touring through:
Auckland, at the TelstraClear Centre, Manukau on 7 & 8 August 2006
Rotorua, at the Soundshell on 10 & 11 August 2006
Hamilton, at the Waikato Museum on 14 & 15 August 2006
Palmerston North, at Te Manawa Science Centre on 17 & 18 August 2006
Wellington, at Capital E on 21-25 August 2006
Christchurch, at Science Alive on 28 & 29 August 2006
Dunedin, at Otago Museum on 31 August and 1 September 2006
For show times, venue contact and booking details visit http://www.nzamt.org.nz/origami.htm and download the booking
sheet.
Sponsored By: The Royal Society of New Zealand through its Science and Technology Promotion Fund.