6,574 research outputs found

    The Cosmological Liveliness of Terril Calder\u27s The Lodge: Animating Our Relations and Unsettling Our Cinematic Spaces

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    I first saw MĂ©tis artist Terril Calder\u27s 2014 stop-frame feature, The Lodge, an independently made, relatively small- budget film, at its premiere at the ImagineNative Film + Media Arts festival, held annually in Toronto, Canada. The feature-length animation played to a full house at the Light-box Theater downtown. Many were there to attend the five-day festival, which is dedicated to Indigenous media made by and for Indigenous people. Others were there because as members of Toronto\u27s general public they wanted to catch a movie during a night out in the city. Since then The Lodge has shown at various other independent venues. It isn\u27t what you might think of as commercial fare. Its audiences are not huge. However, for those who do view The Lodge, the film presents a creative space to rethink our sense of boundaries in a number of ways: boundaries between human/nonhuman, white/Indigenous, male/female, spectator/film-object. In this essay, I argue that the film is thus an invitation to question the naturalness of hegemonic identity assumptions that demarcate such boundaries. I interviewed Calder (via Skype and subsequent email correspondence) soon after I saw the film, and I situate a close textual analysis of the film within the context of her intent and the burgeoning scholarly dialogue between Indigenous studies and ecocritical studies. The scholarly dialogue, as Joni Adamson and I write in the introduction to our recent anthology, Ecocriticism and Indigenous Studies: Conversations from Earth to Cosmos (2016), argues for clear sighted understandings of multi-faceted human/more-than-human relationships that exist outside of binaries imposed by Western notions of progress . Similarly, Steven Loft, coeditor of Coded Territories: Tracing Indigenous Pathways in New Media Art, writes of an Indigenous media cosmology that is replete with life and spirit, inclusive of beings, thought, prophecy, and the underlying connectedness of all things and that is not predicated on Western foundations of thought (xvi). Calder extends such Indigenous worldviews of connectedness to cinema and animation in particular

    A STRATEGIC VIEW ON INTERTWINING DIGITAL AND PHYSICAL MATERIALITIES ACROSS LIFECYCLES OF PRODUCTS AND SERVICES

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    Opportunities to use virtual, augmented, and mixed reality (VAM-R) are emerging in various sectors of the economy. To seize them, managers need to develop comprehensive strategies that intertwine digital and physical forms of materiality. This paper proposes a way to assess and steer the transformations of the reality-virtuality continuum across lifecycles of products and services. Our approach identifies use cases for VAM-R according to the (1) strategic imperative, (2) physical materiality, (3) reality-virtuality assessment, (4) digital materiality, (5) information value, and (6) project portfolio. The findings result from three action research cycles in manufacturing and healthcare. For theory, we propose a framework to evaluate the reality-virtuality continuum and guide VAM-R transformations. For practice, we propose and test an artefact accessible to domain experts with different backgrounds, and a sequence of steps to assist managers in their digitalization strategies with VAM-R. Lifecycle approaches offer an alternative perspective to situational transformation, potentially improving the pervasiveness of organizational changes using information technologies

    Sensing bodies:Transdisciplinary enactments of ‘thing-power’ and ‘making-with’ for educational future-making.

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    Dominant conceptions of education are strongly framed by narratives of ‘power-over’ materials, context, and processes, especially where digital and technological applications reduce complexities between humans, materials, and environments. The separation of knowledge, tools, and bodies in ‘disciplinary bounded’, ‘copyrighted’, and ‘patented’ spaces create a disconnect from our need for sustainable relationships, whereby the future is not given but ‘in-the-making’ (Haraway 2016). Drawing on music and science – as examples of distinct disciplines, often siloed and separated in education – this paper advances nuanced understandings of how post human conceptions of ‘thing-power’1(the power of all bodies including materials) and ‘making-with’ (whereby everything makes each other capable) contribute to the affective encounters of materialities within the classroom. By foregrounding the sensing body as a means to touch and be ‘touched’ by the world, we uniquely contribute to methodologies that illuminate the relational intensity of material sensation as part of coming to ‘know’. In doing so, we engage with the performative work of these materialities and re-define the ‘digital’ beyond the delivery of preplanned learning pathways

    An examination of the physical and temporal parameters of post-physical printmaking practice: exploring new modes of collaboration, distribution and consumption resulting from digital processes and networked participation.

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    This research was initiated by questions raised from the researchers professional activities in fine art printmaking and examines, through contextualised artistic practice and critical enquiry, redefinitions in the physical and temporal parameters of digitally mediated fine art printmaking caused by developments in digital media; specifically the impact of digital culture, Web2.0, social networking, augmented and virtual reality. Grounded on critical contextual review the research explores, through contextualised research probes, the notion of post-physical practice and the impact of new modes of collaboration, distribution and consumption on contemporary printmaking. It includes the findings of an international, digitally mediated, participatory and collaborative exchange survey of contemporary digital print, developed through direct enquiry using social media as a research tool. Philosophical questions about the impact of eculture, post-physical working and new modes of print-based artistic practice were examined, as well as the indexicality of the print itself in augmented and virtual contexts. The research employs dynamic triangulation between critical contextual review and direct qualitative and practice-based research; to develop a taxonomy framing the contextual precedents of digital printmaking, pinpointing key markers of transition between traditional and new printmaking. It uses post-studio methods and explores the conception, production, editioning, collection and ownership of print in an increasingly networked digital age, providing proof of concept and exploring virtual immersive surfaces in printmaking. These lead to the development of new models for a second generation of printmaking practice or Printmaking2.0 expressly founded in post-physical practice in a poststudio context and embracing the lingua franca of contemporary digital practice in the production of born digital virtually imprinted forms. In both, the technical practice of post-physical printmaking and the significant artistic implications resulting from the cultural shifts following digital participation and post-physical embodiment

    Playing on the air : recollections from a Hong Kong childhood

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    Blurring the boundaries: Prosumption, circularity and online sustainable consumption through Freecycle

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    © The Author(s) 2015. This article explores the digital exchange and moral ordering of sustainable and ethical consumption in online Freecycle groups. Through interactive exchanges in digital (online posts) and material (consumer items) modes, Freecycling blurs three common binaries in analyses of consumption: (1) consumption/production, (2) digital/material and (3) mainstream/alternative. Drawing on Ritzer's notion of 'implosions' as well as practice theory, I show that Freecycling practices reimagine and reproduce both products and consumers, practising prosumption through mixed digital and material practices in a performative economy, and how mainstream and alternative ways of consuming are entangled in pursuit of more sustainable, ethical consumption. This challenges us to think beyond these traditional binaries and to conceptualise a more blurred, less analytically clean and more circular approach to studying consumption

    'I've used the word cancer but it's actually good news' : discursive performativity of cancer and the identity of urological cancer services

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    © 2015 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness. Acknowledgements We are grateful to the patients and staff who took part in the study, and to two anonymous reviewers whose thoughtful comments helped refine our thinking. This research was supported by a grant from the Big Lottery Fund. The views expressed here are the authors’and do not necessarily reflect those of the funding bodies or any other organisation.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Lighting ambiances and materialities of wood in architecture : a comparative evaluation of the quality of spaces in relation to interior finishes

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    Le bois est un matĂ©riau souvent utilisĂ© par les architectes pour amĂ©liorer l'ambiance gĂ©nĂ©rale d'un espace, mais peu de recherches en prĂ©sentent l’impact rĂ©el du matĂ©riau sur les impressions visuelles et les effets lumineux. Cette recherche Ă©tudie l'influence de la matĂ©rialitĂ© du bois par rapport Ă  la crĂ©ation d'ambiances d'Ă©clairage spĂ©cifiques dans l'architecture. Plus particuliĂšrement, elle se concentre sur l'impact des panneaux dĂ©coratifs en bois Ă  gĂ©nĂ©rer de la diversitĂ© lumineuse dans les espaces intĂ©rieurs et son potentiel Ă  amĂ©liorer la satisfaction environnementale et l'efficacitĂ© Ă©nergĂ©tique. La recherche utilise des maquettes Ă  l’échelle pour leur prĂ©cision dans la reprĂ©sentation des ambiances lumineuses d’espaces Ă©clairĂ©s naturellement ainsi que les technologies rĂ©centes d'imagerie digitale pour capturer et analyser les rĂ©sultats. La mĂ©thodologie permet la comparaison entre les diffĂ©rents rĂ©glages des espaces intĂ©rieurs crĂ©Ă©s par une sĂ©lection des types de matĂ©rialitĂ©s du bois: la rĂ©flectance (valeur), la couleur et la rĂ©flectivitĂ©. Les modalitĂ©s spatiales sont comparĂ©es en prĂ©sence d’ensoleillement direct et sous des conditions de ciel couvert puisque les modĂšles d'Ă©clairage et les ambiances diffĂšrent considĂ©rablement. Les rĂ©sultats permettent d’établir une discussion sur les ambiances en termes de brillance et de contraste, sur la couleur ainsi que la rĂ©partition des zones lumineuses dans l'espace. La recherche souligne le rĂŽle des matĂ©rialitĂ©s que peuvent prendre le bois pour optimiser la diversitĂ© lumineuse et la crĂ©ation d'ambiances visuellement confortables, ainsi que ses possibilitĂ©s d'amĂ©liorer les ambiances architecturales par rapport Ă  la lumiĂšre.Wood is a material often used by architects to enhance the overall ambiance of a space but few research discuss its actual impact on visual impressions and luminous effects. This research studies the influence of wood materialities in relation to creating specific lighting ambiances in architecture. More particularly, it focuses on the impact of decorative wood indoor panels on the creation of daylighting diversity in interior spaces and the potential to improve environmental satisfaction and energy efficiency. The research uses scale models for their accuracy in rendering complex daylighting ambiances in conjunction with the latest imaging technologies to capture and analyze the results. The methodology enables the comparison between different settings of interior spaces created by a selection of wood type materialities: ratio (percentage), color and gloss. Spatial modalities are compared in the presence of direct sunlighting and diffuse skylight conditions since lighting patterns and ambiances differ considerably. The results enable a discussion of ambiances in terms of brightness and contrast, color, as well as the luminous distribution in the space. The research underlines roles of wood materialities to achieve luminous diversity and creating visually comfortable interior ambiances as well as its opportunities to enhance architectural ambiances in relation to light
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