Fictional radio-spaces

In spring 2007 interaction design students at AHO participated in a research-driven course called Tangible interactions that investigated themes around RFID, NFC and the Touch project. This is one of the projects that emerged from the course.

Visualisation of GSM

In this project called “the bubbles of radio” Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas used critical, visual design as a way of exploring the perception of many kinds of electromagnetic fields. The project answered the brief Fields and Seams that asks “How can we use the increasingly radio-saturated landscape for creative or functional purposes?”

Inspired by Hertzian Tales by Dunne and Raby as well as other projects including Cell Phone Disco, Ingeborg explored many critical design products or services that would engage with the landscape of radio. Some of these early concepts can be seen on her weblog.

Using inspiration from richly illustrated books on botany, zoology and natural history, Ingeborg arrived at the concept of an encyclopeadia of radio waves that contains a selection of fictional radio ‘species’. Armed with a well researched and advanced knowledge of the use, application and technicalities of each radio technology she created fictional visualisations of the ways in which radio waves inhabit space. These are creative expressions based as much on personal creativity as on technical or scientific data like range and signal strength. Six contemporary radio technologies were visualised: Bluetooth, DMB, GSM, RFID, Wifi and Zigbee.

Like all good scientific guides, the bubbles of radio includes a visual scale:

Scales, from phone to architecture

The scale of radio is usefully measured at the scale of the device, at the scale of the body and at the scale of the building (see also Everyware on scale). The visualisations are thus placed in this context and we are left with the drawings themselves, where the shape, texture, direction and density gives us a sense of each technology. Click on the following for full size images:

Bluetooth visualisationVisualisation of DMBVisualisation of GSMVisualisation of RFIDVisualisation of WifiVisualisation of Zigbee

These visualisations are not intended to be technically accurate or to offer actionable information. Instead they provide a playful cue to reflect and consider radio as something tangible and physical to be experienced by other senses, not just through a screen.

Just for fun, here are the latin names of each field:

Bluetooth : Nevrotis Dentus Aquarae
DMB : Spherum Elektrum Multanum
GSM : Spherum Magnea Globalum
RFID : Raptus Arphadus
Wifi : Videus Fidelus
Zigbee : Nevrotis

Ingeborg then hand-crafted a pocket field-guide from these illustrations, in a physical form that even smells like an age-old dusty guide to flora and fauna.

Bubbles of radio

This book also included pattern samples; a mixture of wallpaper, fabric and textile patterns that could act as ways of identifying wirelessly augmented spaces or objects. Here is a pattern for RFID:

RFID pattern

And here is a pattern for Bluetooth:

Bluetooth pattern

This project explored radio in a unique way. Ingeborg has created visual expressions of radio that are immediately accessible and beautiful. Although their usefulness is harder to define they have provided us with many opportunities to discuss and reflect on these intangible technologies.

Download a poster (PDF) of all the radio visualisations here.

The Bubbles of Radio poster (PDF)

See more student work from the Touch project.

Related things:

  1. Making radio tangible Next week we’re launching some new work that explores the spatial aspects of RFID. So before we publish that, here is a quick summary of existing work on radio, sensors and space that I’ve......
  2. Wireless in the world An ongoing Touch theme is about making invisible wireless technologies visible, in order to better understand and communicate with and about them (see a Graphic Language for RFID, Dashed lines and Fictional radio spaces).......
  3. Immaterials: the ghost in the field This video is about exploring the spatial qualities of RFID, visualised through an RFID probe, long exposure photography and animation. It features Timo Arnall of the Touch project and Jack Schulze of BERG. The......
  4. New film: Wireless in the World 2 In this film, Wireless in the world 2, simple visualisations of radio ‘spaces’ are overlaid into urban spaces. The film has been made as a follow up to this video experiment and has been......
  5. Teaching Touch II For the second year we are teaching an MA interaction design course called Tangible Interactions that is driven by the Touch project at AHO. Last year the course was largely successful both for students......

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10 Comments

  1. Posted 7 December 2007 at 5:40 | Permalink

    That is so insanely lovely. I love the Haeckelian aspect of it, and especially that it has a smell. Top marks!

  2. Posted 20 December 2007 at 8:14 | Permalink

    Waves are beautiful.

  3. Dries
    Posted 20 December 2007 at 17:24 | Permalink

    Marvelous work, any way of getting hold of (a copy) of the booklet? I’d love to use this in my research…

  4. Posted 29 December 2007 at 5:03 | Permalink

    have you done any studies of the shapes of waves of particular types of content (not the transmission media, but the content?): text data vs. streaming AM talk radio, vs. a blog post vs my favourite, audio public domain literature?

    I suppose they would all have particular profiles within each transmission medium …

  5. Posted 7 January 2008 at 2:30 | Permalink

    This project is very beautiful…..and I’m not surprised that Bluetooth (“Mr. Undependable”) looks so freakin ugly.

  6. Posted 17 January 2008 at 0:25 | Permalink

    This is very lovely. Well done Ingeborg. I like the inclusion of the wallpaper.

  7. Posted 14 February 2008 at 17:58 | Permalink

    This is fantastic!

  8. qwerty
    Posted 22 February 2008 at 6:01 | Permalink

    It is possible to get/order a copy of the printed book/pocket field guide?
    I just love the project!!

  9. Posted 17 March 2008 at 15:42 | Permalink

    very intriguing visuals. remind me on images in library that shipped with the atari st image software neochrome i always loved. great work!

  10. Posted 10 November 2009 at 20:45 | Permalink

    yes the Haeckleian influences are strong and so is the imagery, making visible the invisible…

15 Trackbacks

  1. [...] invisible fields of chatter Here is an amazing student project that seeks to re-conceptualize our ideas of radio-waves as emitted by [...]

  2. By Art Context « Immersive Environment on 15 April 2008 at 16:56

    [...] the psychological states and physical conditions experienced underwater as new work of live art. Bubbles of Radio, Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas « (working class) bourgeois String Theory [...]

  3. [...] d’explorer la perception des champs électromagnétiques et ont donné naissance à une courte “Encyclopédie des ondes radios”, contenant des espèces d’ondes fictionnelles, représentant les différentes manières dont les [...]

  4. [...] nearfield [...]

  5. [...] rdio - spaces http://www.nearfield.org/2007/12/fictional-radio-spaces Published [...]

  6. By Magnetic Movie · Touch on 8 May 2008 at 19:29

    [...] the same vein as the Bubbles of Radio work from last year, Magnetic Movie is a film that explores visible and audible manifestations of [...]

  7. [...] in die Welt der Phantasie oder sogar Esoterik abdriften. So zum Beispiel auch bei dem Projekt ‘the bubbles of radio’ bei dem die Studentin Ingeborg Thomas Elektromagnetische Strahlung als imaginäre Wolkenformen [...]

  8. [...] “The Bubbles Of Radio” is an interesting project by students from AHO in Norway where they cataloged different radio frequency types in the style of a nature watch booklet. Each signal type was given a latin-style name, for instance Bluetooth is Nevrotis Dentus Aquarae and RFID is Raptus Arphadus and accompanied by creative illustrations that show them as visible, tangible parts of the environment. Full information including a PDF chart of the visualisations are at Nearfield.org. [...]

  9. [...] Encyclopedia of Radio Waves [...]

  10. [...] artistic exploration of Fictional Radio Spaces — coming to terms with the unseeable frequencies surrounding us… Clips from “The [...]

  11. [...] Grafik über die Visualisierung von fiktiven Radiowellen - by Touch. Kommentare (0) Kommentar [...]

  12. By Making radio tangible on 10 October 2009 at 13:41

    [...] in her project the Bubbles of Radio (that emerged from our Fields and Seams brief) Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas imagined and visualised [...]

  13. [...] Bubbles of radio is a project developed by Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas based on the idea of our sensory perception of the electromagnetic space. Inspired by richly illustrated books of botany, zoology and natural history, the artist created in 2008 a selection of fictional species drawings that visualize the ways in which technologies like Wifi, RFID or GSM inhabit space. She used a critical visual design for the bubbles and related them to different visual scales that indicates proportions of the “invisible space” occupied by these technologies. She compared scales between people, mobiles and buildings. [...]

  14. [...] Bubbles of radio is a project developed by Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas based on the idea of our sensory perception of the electromagnetic space. Inspired by richly illustrated books of botany, zoology and natural history, the artist created in 2008 a selection of fictional species drawings that visualize the ways in which technologies like Wifi, RFID or GSM inhabit space. She used a critical visual design for the bubbles and related them to different visual scales that indicates proportions of the “invisible space” occupied by these technologies. She compared scales between people, mobiles and buildings. [...]

  15. [...] ‘The Bubbles of Radio’ is an exciting project about imagining and visualising radiowaves (thanks, Gro, for telling me about it!). Originally presented in 2007 as part of a design interaction course, it is now shown at the Telemuseum in Oslo. The exhibition features experimental visualisations of electromagnetic fields, which are intended to provide ‘many opportunities to discuss and reflect on these intangible technologies. There are interesting parallels to the Mutable Matter project. For instance, the emphasis of ‘Bubbles of Radio’ to offer ‘a playful cue to reflect and consider radio as something tangible and physical to be experienced by other senses’. Soon, the museum will also offer Mutable Matter style interactions during which visitors can contribute and discuss their own visions of ‘radio’. So, if you’re within travelling distance to the Telemuseum, make sure you get yourself down there! If not, check out the fascinating project blog. [...]

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