Complexity
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- Joined: July 11th, 2007, 9:50 pm
I have seen models that have been molded and sculpted (using wet paper or foil) to such an extent as to render the actual folding irrelevant. The folder might as well have just picked up a blob of papier mache and started sculpting, because it no longer has anything to do with origami when it gets to that point.Jonnycakes wrote: I respect that you have a philosophy about folding that you stick to, but I just think it is ridiculous.

- Jonnycakes
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You mean like crumple folding? Or like Eric Joisel's masks? Those are certainly much different than conventional origami, but I think those are just different branches of the same art. Shaping is what gives life to origami-that is the primary thing that separates art from reproducible geometric forms. Just about all origami requires some shaping.
You have managed to identify the most fundamental difference in our viewpoints: I consider "reproducible geometric forms" to be part of the definition of origami. A one of a kind piece can be nice, but it doesn't impress me nearly as much as the same piece fully diagrammed.Jonnycakes wrote: Shaping is what gives life to origami-that is the primary thing that separates art from reproducible geometric forms.