Robotic Swan Majestically Dances to 'Swan Lake,' Moving Viewers to Tears | Popular Science

By Clay Dillow Posted 09.21.2010 at 1:29 pm 6 Comments

The Dying Swan Absolutely majestic. Kerstin Gauffin

In America, the animalistic automatons at Chuck E. Cheese entertain (and sometimes terrify) children with their inelegant, slack-jawed singing, spastic motions, and soulless, lifeless eyes. Itā€™s a stark contrast with Sweden, where a robot swan is literally moving people to tears with a four-minute, professionally choreographed routine, dramatically executed to Tchaikovskyā€™s ā€œSwan Lake.ā€

The Dying Swan moves sometimes gently, sometimes with energetic passion, but apparently always beautifully, leading the few people who have witnessed its dance to describe it with words like ā€œtouchingā€ and ā€œbeautiful.ā€ In other words, its display conjures adjectives not usually associated with the motions of a robot.

The Dying Swanā€™s creators at the MƤlardalen University wanted to explore the role of robotics in art and dance, hiring a respected professional choreographer to teach the swan its routine, which it performs elegantly via 19 different joints that give it a high degree of flexibility and dexterity. While the routine hasnā€™t been released publicly yet, the rest of the world wonā€™t have to wait very long to weep over the Dying Swanā€™s majesty; it makes its public debut on Thursday at Swedenā€™s largest book fair in Gothenburg.

Posted via email from Peace Jaway