đ§”Data Physicalization Resources
Claudia Berger maintains a Zotero âphysical data vizâ group library containing nearly 100 articles, datasets, and other relevant reads.
I added several items to that library this past week, and wanted to capture my Bluesky thread about them for the blog:
Personal stress data as commentary on stress-impacted health issues
Laurie Frickâs âStress Inventoryâ uses leather discs on stretched linen, piled and colored to record daily irritation levels & highlight stressâ contribution to chronic health issues. (HT Laura Miller)
Weaving data analysis of speculative fiction
Quinn Dombrowskiâs âThe Locked Loom 1: Gideon the Ninthâ discusses a weaving text visualization and analysis based on elements of everyoneâs favorite âlesbian necromancers in spaceâ fantasy novel (the Locked Tomb Series; highly recommend, it is not silly/pulp despite that being a fitting descriptor, but rather epic, page-turning speculative fiction/sci fi).
Baking data-displaying cakes for climate change advocacy
An interview with âbaker-turned-glacier guideâ Rose Mcadoo on her âCakes for Climate Changeâ combating climate demise through educational cakes and desserts that explain the natural processes behind glaciology and climate change.
Workflow for turning ambient audio data into 3D prints
Audrey Desjardinsâ and Timea Tihanyiâs âListeningCups: A Case of Data Tactility & Data Storiesâ documents a workflow for capturing data, creating 3D printed porcelain cups embedded with datasets of everyday ambient sounds; and shares reflections around experiences such as âdata accidentsâ (HT Beth Mitchell)
Reflections from installing a data physicalization exhibit
Claudia Berger and Chris Alen Sulaâs piece on lessons learned from installing a data physicalization of a HASTAC conferenceâs metadata, published in Nightingale (the journal of the Data Visualization Society).
Building data intended for (sometimes physical) art
âDatasets as Imaginationâ by Lisa Shroff argues for collectively built datasets shaped specifically for reuse by artists for art, including for physical data exhibits. (HT Zoe LeBlanc)
Library research guide for data physicalization
âData Driven Creativity: Making Data Physicalizationsâ is a library guide by Ariel Ackerly, Sarah Reiff Conell, and Ofira Schwartz, gathering datasets, projects, and writing about data physicalizations.
(âHTâ is shorthand for âhat tipâ, a minimal-characters way people say âI found this link via this other person sharing it in the past; thanks to themâ.)