George Stiny
George Stiny is an American design and computation theorist. He co-created the concept of shape grammars with James Gips.
Stiny was educated at MIT and UCLA. He has taught at the University of Sydney, the Royal College of Art (London), and the Open University. He was on the faculty at UCLA for fifteen years before joining the MIT Department of Architecture in 1996. He currently is a Professor in the Computation Group of the Department of Architecture at MIT.
Published works
- Stiny, G. & Gips, J. (1972). Shape grammars and the generative specification of painting and sculpture. In Information Processing 71, pp. 1460–1465. North-Holland Publishing Company. link to article
- Stiny, G. & Gips, J. (1978). Algorithmic Aesthetics. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-03467-9 link to book
- Stiny, G. (1980). Introduction to shape and shape grammars. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design 7(3), 343–351.
- Stiny, G. (2006). Shape: Talking about Seeing and Doing. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA. link to book
- The grammar of paradise: on the generation of Mughul gardens
- The Algebras of Design
gollark: I mean, if you just flip the sign, you get repulsion where there would be attraction and attraction where there would be repulsion.
gollark: Except <#453931191658348545>.
gollark: I mean, if you actually *have* to, you can probably just DM him, he's on this Discord server.
gollark: Remotely disable any nearby car engines somehow.
gollark: Sound an extremely loud buzzer if anyone goes near you.
External links
- George Stiny home page at MIT Architecture
- Full text of Algorithmic Aesthetics book
- Interview with Stiny, at MIT Libraries
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