1. CIRCUIT ART
A combination of Engineering & Beauty
a unique combination of engineering and beauty. Electrical components
and wire work give us the ability to move and harness electricity for a vari-
ety of uses. Some of the best examples of electrical beauty are seen every
holiday season in thousands of sparkling lights and synchronized displays
shining on houses, trees, and even skyscrapers.
Express your creativity by designing your piece of electrical
artwork! Combine various art materials that either conduct or
insulate electrons to create a greeting card for a good friend, a
piece of wall-art for your house, or a fun display to sit on your
desk! Let your imagination be your guide.
To the left - check out examples of how Jie Qi has turned her
“paper circuits” into a dynamic artistic painting.
Also note that this to the left as an interlacing
of circuitry components (resistors, diodes,
etc.) is an intricate piece created by
Leonardo Ulian.
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I.e. metals, salt water, lemon juice, graphite, and even the human body!
I.e. plastic, paper, Styrofoam, and rubber.
2. CIRCUIT ART
1. Imagine and/or sketch out your final piece.
How you will incorporate an LED circuit in your final
piece. Will you make a card? Or a sculpture?
This is important to ensure that the logistics of the circuit
work.
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2. Attach the LED, the battery and conductor
material.
Following the diagram to the left, complete the
circuit.
Some LEDs have a positive and neg-
ative connection just like batteries. Make sure
your connect the positive side of the battery to
the positive side of the LED (the longer wire
leg) and the negative side to the negative leg!
3. Bring your piece to life!
Use your functioning circuit and inte-
grateitintoacard,orcircuitsculpture.
Test your circuit in small sections, ex-
panding the area once you know the
connection is working.
Did you twist/secure every circuit con-
nection tightly?
Wrap malfunctioning connections in
aluminum foil (a strong conductor!)
Did you connect your battery to LED cor-
rectly? (I.e. + to +, - to -)
Ask a friend or facilitator if they can see
where you went wrong.