Public interface effects: re-embodiment and transversality in public projection.
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Conference paperAbstract
Public projections serve to both complicate and augment the relationship between various entities in public space by creating affordances for the enfolding of temporal, spatial, and material contexts via digital-networked media. Drawing on the work of Rafael Lozano-Hemmer and Camille ...
See morePublic projections serve to both complicate and augment the relationship between various entities in public space by creating affordances for the enfolding of temporal, spatial, and material contexts via digital-networked media. Drawing on the work of Rafael Lozano-Hemmer and Camille Utterback, the authors argue that re-embodiment and transversality are key interface effects of successful public projection installations. These tactics serve an important function in engaging negotiated subjectivities and identities within the shifting parameters of media and the city. The discussion concludes with a brief description of "The Line," a research-creation project proposed by the authors which attempts to instantiate some of the strategies covered.
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See morePublic projections serve to both complicate and augment the relationship between various entities in public space by creating affordances for the enfolding of temporal, spatial, and material contexts via digital-networked media. Drawing on the work of Rafael Lozano-Hemmer and Camille Utterback, the authors argue that re-embodiment and transversality are key interface effects of successful public projection installations. These tactics serve an important function in engaging negotiated subjectivities and identities within the shifting parameters of media and the city. The discussion concludes with a brief description of "The Line," a research-creation project proposed by the authors which attempts to instantiate some of the strategies covered.
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Date
2013-01-01Publisher
ISEA InternationalAustralian Network for Art & Technology
University of Sydney
Citation
Cleland, K., Fisher, L. & Harley, R. (2013) Proceedings of the 19th International Symposium on Electronic Art, ISEA2013, Sydney.Share