Zoe Laughlin | |
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![]() Zoe Laughlin in 2011 | |
Alma mater | |
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Known for | Making, art, materials science and engineering |
Website | http://zoelaughlin.com/ |
Zoe Laughlin ( /ˈlɑːflɪn/ ) is a British artist, maker and materials engineer. She is the co-founder and Director of the Institute of Making at University College London. She is a regular panelist on the BBC Radio 4 show The Kitchen Cabinet. Laughlin was awarded the 2019 Inspire, Support Achieve Award for Design Engineering from the Institution of Engineering Designers.
Laughlin took A-Levels in Art, Textiles and English Literature [1] and completed a Masters of Art at Central Saint Martin's College of Art and Design. She earned a PhD in Material Science in the Department of Engineering at King's College London in 2010. [2]
During her PhD, Laughlin discovered how materials affects the taste of food, and how to predict the taste of food using electrode potential. [3] [4] Her thesis, "Beyond the Swatch: How can the Science of Materials be Represented by the Materials Themselves in a Materials Library?", became the basis for the methodological approaches of the Institute of Making and some of its research. [5] [6] The experiments Laughlin undertook were designed to identify the links between the physical properties of materials and our aesthetic perception of materiality. [7] As a result, she has been key to the development of the concept of Sensoaesthetics, which is the "application of scientific methodology to the aesthetic, sensual and emotional side" of materials. [8]
In 2010/11, Mark Miodownik, Martin Conreen and Laughlin began working on the Institute of Making, which they planned to open in the east wing of Somerset House. [9] In February 2012, they joined University College London, and launched "A Taste of Materials" in April 2012. [10] She published Material Matters: New Materials in Design with Black Dog Publishing. [11] Their Materials Library and Make Space opened in Malet Place on 14 March 2013. [12] [13] [14]
Laughlin has created work and done projects with partners and galleries including Tate Modern, the Hayward Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Wellcome Collection. [15] [16] [17] In 2016 her spoons became part of the new permanent collection of London's Design Museum and are on display in the Designer Maker User gallery. [18]
Laughlin is interested in the sound of and taste of materials, as well as what she terms "the performativity of matter". [19] She regularly speaks about materials and performs demonstration lectures. [20] [21] In 2012 she delivered a TED x talk in Brussels on "The Performativity of Matter". [22] [23]
She is a trustee of the Crafts Council, and works with them to integrate new materials and making methods into the crafts sector. [24] [25] Laughlin was honoured by the Institution of Engineering Designers for her "outstanding contributions to design engineering". [26]
Laughlin produces and hosts the podcast The Things that Make Us. [27] [28] She appears regularly on British radio and television, and gives invited talks on material science in Britain and around the world. [29] [30] [31] She has appeared on the Today Programme and "The Material Word" with Quentin Cooper. [32] [33] [34] In 2016, Laughlin delivered an invited talk at The Royal Institution, "Performing Matter: Greatest Hits and New Findings". [35]
Laughlin was the resident scientist on ITV's long running series This Morning , hosting the regular bi-weekly feature "Wonderstuff". [36] [37] On the show, Laughlin introduced Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby to many marvellous materials and conducted numerous demonstrations including smelting copper and turning milk to plastic. [38] [39] [40] In 2019 she returned to the show with a bang for a run of spectacular demonstrations [41] including dripping a monster slime from the studio ceiling [42] and ripping oxygen from hydrogen peroxide. [43]
Laughlin was asked on to BBC Radio 4's The Kitchen Cabinet as a guest in 2015 and has since become their resident materials expert. [44] The May 2016 episode, from Sandwich, Kent, was recorded in Laughlin's old school hall. [45]
Laughlin was a maker of tea on the BBC Two television programme Big Life Fix. [46] [47] [48] In the show, a team of designers and inventors created solutions, often as simple as repurposing everyday objects, to change people's lives. [49] [50] On the show, Laughlin designed a number of items, including a lightweight, durable foam helmet for a child who suffers from hydrocephalus. [51] Laughlin described the experience as "a great show to be part of". [52] In Series 2, "Inventing the Impossible: Big Life Fix" Laughlin made a "second skin" for a young man with Xeroderma Pigmentosum [53] [54] and a pair of robotic gloves that gave movement back to a man with paralysed hands. [55]
In 2017 Laughlin and Lucy Worsley presented a 90-minute BBC Four programme exploring the history of fireworks, Fizz Bang Wallop - A Tudor Firework Spectacular. [56] The show, Fireworks for a Tudor Queen, was broadcast in March 2018.
In the spring of 2018 Laughlin and George McGavin made a BBC Four documentary The Secret Life of Landfill: A Rubbish History, exploring the fate and future of rubbish deposited in landfill sites. [57] [58]
In summer 2018 Laughlin wrote and presented her own show for BBC Four entitled The Secret Story of Stuff: Materials for the Modern Age, blending "bonhomie, excitement and expertise in perfect proportions". [59] In the programme she performed a number of demonstrations to reveal the wonderous properties of materials, including a test of the thermally insulative equalities of mycelium using a high-powered blow touch and ice-cream. [60] [61] The show was first broadcast in the autumn of 2018 and has subsequently been repeated. [62]
Over the course of 3 consecutive nights in June 2019, Laughlin co-presented Plane Spotting Live [63] for BBC Four with Peter Snow and Andi Peters. The programme was broadcast live from a set constructed on East Midlands Aeropark, alongside the runway of East Midlands Airport. [64]
In How to Make, [65] Laughlin deconstructs everyday items - training shoes, a toothbrush, and a pair of headphones - examining the materials they're made of and re-making a customised version of each. This BBC Four series first aired on 2 April 2020 and was produced in connection with the Open University.
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