https://www.dom.riccobene.com/bio
Something great happens when an artist discovers the right tool. Imagine Yo-Yo Ma cradling a cello for the first time, Steven Spielberg pressing record on his first camera, Serena Williams picking up her first tennis racket.
Perhaps it felt a bit like that like when Dom Riccobene fired up his Freedom Machine for the first time.
Dom Riccobene still remembers the first CNC machines he saw. He was studying film directing at the Art Center College of Design, when he walked past a shop window. Behind the glass, he saw people operating CNC machines, powerful tools that cut and carved. He recalls feeling intrigued. What were they working on? How did the machines work?
Fast forward a few years. An architecture dropout working at the family busines in New Mexico, Dom spent most days designing and building paving systems. He and his father, Tom Riccobene, were hard at work on innovative designs for paving mats. As they slogged through iterations of prototypes, Dom wondered if a CNC machine might help speed things up.
They bought a small CNC machine, and the work improvedâbut it wasnât enough. The hobby machine wasnât accurate enough, too small, and the tool marks it made wouldnât be acceptable for a production master. They tried outsourcing some of the work, but the results fell short. Dom started researching other options.
He discovered Diversified Machine Systems (DMS), and he had a good feeling about their product. The Freedom Machine caught his eye, a CNC router with a universal platform that could process a variety of materials. The price was competitive with other companies he had researched. He decided to pull the trigger, and he saw immediate results.
âIt was night and day,â he recalls.
Dom was excited to share their work with a larger audience, but since patents take up to two years to issue, he had to keep it under wraps. In the meantime, he started using his Freedom Machine for creative projects that he could share immediately. By day he worked for the family business, and by night he hunkered down in the shop, creating his own work. He used his film degree to capture the process in real time, making beautiful time-lapse videos of colorful landscapes emerging out of solid blocks.
As he posted videos on Instagram, a larger audience gravitated to his work. He made a mountain valley out of layered wood, which drew thousands of new followers. He converted satellite data into 3D models, which he programmed into tool paths and then filmed.
The Freedom Machine has become Domâs go-to tool, as readily accessible as a table saw. He and his father have used it for all sorts of things, from replacing shelves and stools in their shop, to developing new products. Theyâre impressed by its replicability, the precision with which it can make 2,000 identical molds. The Freedom Machine consistently implements their designs, without the flaws or mechanical constraints theyâve faced with lesser machines.
âItâs an instrument thatâs always in tune,â Dom says. âIt performs when youâre ready to create.â
Domâs creative work blurs the lines of art and manufacturing. Some machine operators have commented that his work is not âpractical,â while some artists critique his use of a machine. Dom, however, sees the value in mixing media and in putting a machine to artistic aims. He chooses his materials purposefully, and he puts a lot of care into his compositions.
âFor me the whole point of it is that itâs impossible to do by hand,â he says. âIâm proud of what I do.â
His followers agree. The average video he posts reaches over a quarter of a million people, and his audience is highly engaged. People find his videos to be mesmerizing, seeing a landscape appear out of a solid block.
In the coming year, Dom plans to launch a Kickstarter to begin monetizing the landscapes he makes with his Freedom Machine. In the meantime, he doesnât feel rushed. He has a meaningful attachment to his work, and he never wants it to become a chore. For him, the craft itself is what brings joy.
*All videos and photos shown are property of Dom Riccobene and we attribute all ownership to him and his business.