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[Commlist] CfP - Screen Based Technologies and Representation
Tue Mar 01 20:46:08 GMT 2022
THE SCREEN AS SURFACE, SITE AND SPACE
Dates: 01-03 December 2022
Abstracts: 01 July 2022 (Round 1) - 05 October 2022 (Round 2)
Virtual - National University of Singapore
https://amps-research.com/visioning-nus/
CALL:
Screen-based devices have become an inexorable part of our everyday
lives. They include (but are not limited to) apparatuses for cinematic
entertainment, imaging, surveillance, social networking, creative
expression, documentation, 3D modelling, real-time collaborations, and
hosting immersive environments. They exist in many forms and sizes, from
touchscreens on compact smart devices to building facades and
infrastructure that serve as the canvas for massive media architecture
projections in urban environments. Electronic visual displays
proliferate in most industries: art and design, healthcare, IT, research
and development. At the height of the COVID-19 global pandemic, screens
acquired greater relevance, as the ‘window’ to online interactions,
offering solace and immediacy remotely across geographical distances and
time zones.
With the screen serving as the subject of discourse, we probe into its
earliest developments informed by proto-cinematic forms of
entertainment. One can trace the mechanisation of vision in the late
nineteenth century that gave rise to a cinema of attractions and new
technologies of seeing, in photography, actualité films, and opaque
projections. Merging cinematic immersion with the haptic virtues of the
screen, multi-screen artworks and interactive installations imbue new
media with an environmental dimension, privileging a more mobile and
embodied form of spectatorship. Meanwhile, the digital age introduced an
unprecedented range of virtualities, expanding the lexicon of extended
realities to encompass augmented reality, mixed reality and virtual
worlds – with varying degrees of interactivity but all of which are
mediated through LCD screens and head-mounted displays.
What is evident when exploring these optical histories is the primacy of
space for the structuring of experience, and how spatial ontology is
continuously redefined by milestones in screen technology development.
By reflecting on historical precedents, how might this further enrich
our understanding of the materiality of screen as media?
FORMAT HIGHLIGHT:
Pre-recorded presentations and short films welcome.
Films and videos to be hosted on the AMPS Academic YouTube Channel
Book publications with Intellect Books.
Journal Special Issue with UCL Press.
https://amps-research.com/visioning-nus/
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