Abstract:
This book was inspired by observations, research over the last several years, and
subsequent talk on the subject at SIGGRAPH 2012. The field of 3D Digital Design
has added several photogrammetry and retopology-based technologies resulting in
many new and accelerated workflows, which have also affected the 3D design
education process.
It has been a journey not only in the writing, but in the research and approach.
What we describe in these pages is an ongoing case study that started many years
ago, and will continue for as long as we continue to teach and to learn. As ‘‘early
adopters’’ in the field of technology influenced design-based education we naturally push for advanced technology, but as part of a larger institution we must
accept what the constraints of budget and adherence to tradition dictate. We have
found that these opposing forces create a natural balance; that in some cases
constraints lead to greater creativity than freedom ever can—but in other cases the
opposite is true.
The book looks at the convergent nature of technology and its relationship to
the field of photogrammetry, and 3D design. This is a facet of a broader discussion
of the nature of technology itself and the relationship of technology to art, as well
as an examination of the educational process itself. We have addressed the
question of how we are adjusting and will continue to adapt to further disruptive
technologies.
Over the years, we have been faced with this question and more; in the
development of a post-secondary curriculum we are always questioning—are we
teaching art and design, or are we training technology? Are we teaching our
students to think, to ideate, to create, or are we teaching them how to use tools?
Clearly, the two concepts are inexorably intertwined, but in any educational
institution or college curriculum it is important to make the distinction, and to
understand the areas that are clearly defined as well as those that are not.
Each year we are presented with new technology. Software and hardware tools
are developing at an extremely rapid rate and with each new change, each new
outgrowth, we must make important decisions about whether or not these new
tools are important enough to incorporate into our existing curriculum. Do we keep
pace for the sake of keeping pace, or will our adaptation to change foster creativity
and new thought? Given the existing constraints of time and budget, what are we
willing to sacrifice in order to embrace these changes and fold them into our