{"id":27306,"date":"2021-12-08T12:41:17","date_gmt":"2021-12-08T11:41:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ekwc.kwaaidevelop.nl\/kunstenaar\/hans-muller\/"},"modified":"2024-06-05T12:24:04","modified_gmt":"2024-06-05T10:24:04","slug":"hans-muller","status":"publish","type":"kunstenaar","link":"https:\/\/ekwc.nl\/kunstenaar\/hans-muller\/","title":{"rendered":"Hans Muller"},"content":{"rendered":"
Hans Muller (NL) once studied to become a barrel organ builder. He became an artist, but he used his knowledge to produce ceramic organ-stones; modular bricks, which are stackable and have the ability to pass air and generate sound. The dream is to build an Organ House, a pavilion or folly that visitors can enter to experience what it sounds like inside a musical instrument. Muller used a 3D designed wooden press-in-mold with CNC-milled and 3D printed plastic rabbets. The hollow air-tubes were made with our mechanical extruder.
\nMuller also created a flute-stone in which an extruded hollow tube has been modified by hand to function as a flute, inspired by an archaeological discovery near Dordrecht (NL) of a flute from the fourteenth century, which turned out to herald the origin of church organ building in the Netherlands.
\nBeing impatient, waiting for the clay to dry, Muller worked on a side project he named Ritalin Man. He made a 3D scan of his own body which was then 3D printed in clay. The body was glazed with an underglaze and the box received a glaze transfer.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":31880,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false},"class_list":["post-27306","kunstenaar","type-kunstenaar","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","countries-the-netherlands","disciplines-fine-arts","disciplines-other","disciplines-visual-artist"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n