----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------

Welcome to the third week of the July discussion on  –empyre–  soft-skinned 
space:

Moderated by Sue Hawksley (UK/AUS) and Simon Biggs (AUS/UK) with invited 
discussants Susan Kozel (SE), Johannes Birringer (UK), Samantha Gorman (USA), 
Sophia Lycouris (UK), Tamara Ashley (UK), Garth Paine (USA), Hellen Sky (AUS), 
Daniel Tercio (PT), Sally Jane Norman (NZ/FR) and Sarah Whatley (UK).

The month's discussion engages issues concerning 'virtual embodiment'. This 
theme is open to interpretation - suggesting concepts and practices that are 
situated in the physical, the computational, the imaginative, the metaphysical 
or all of these spaces, depending on context. Facebook's acquisition of Oculus, 
developers of the Rift virtual reality headset, promises to make a new virtual 
experiential space popularly available. This raises questions about the impact 
of the virtual when it converges with popular social media. As shared VR 
experiences becomes pervasive how might social conventions shift and notions of 
selfhood and collective evolve? What might a collective virtual experience 
contribute to notions of extended or distributed mind, agency or identity? Does 
virtual embodiment depend on, augment or replace bodily practices? What will 
the quotidian affects be?

Thanks to the second week of our discussion's invited discussants Samantha 
Gorman and Sophia Lycouris, as well as those who contributed to the discussion. 
During the second week of discussion the focus has been upon the body in space 
and whether the virtual constitutes a new kind of space or represents as 
different mode of engagement with the spaces we already inhabit. The terms 
'virtual' and 'immersion' were questioned within this context and the principle 
of energy flows identified as a way to appreciate how we interact in 
representational spaces. Theatrical space and language were explored and the 
pressure to adopt a photo-realistic approach to visualisation questioned. We 
hope these themes will continue to be unpacked as the discussion develops 
further.

For the third week of discussion around 'virtual embodiment' we welcome Garth 
Paine, Hellen Sky and Tamara Ashley:

Garth Paine is the Associate Director of the School of Arts Media and 
Engineering and Digital Culture program at Arizona State University where he is 
also Professor of Digital Sound and Interactive Media. He is particularly 
fascinated with sound as an exhibitable object. This passion has led to several 
interactive responsive environments where the inhabitant generates the sonic 
landscape through their presence and behaviour. It has also led to several 
music scores for dance works, generated through realtime video tracking and/or 
bio-sensing of the dancers. His work has been shown throughout Australia, 
Europe, Japan, USA, South America, Hong Kong and New Zealand. Dr Paine is 
internationally regarded as an innovator in the field of interactivity in 
experimental music and media arts. His URL is http://www.activatedspace.com

Hellen Sky is an Australian digital choreographer/performer/director/writer. 
Her projects bridge dance, performance and installation at times extended 
through new technologies and data generated by the moving body as a fluid 
interface between micro-movements, media, virtual-electronic and physical 
architectures, words and objects. As co-founder of new media performance 
company Company in Space (1992-2004) and as Hellen Sky and Collaborators she 
has presented work across Australia and internationally.

Tamara Ashley is the Artistic Director of dancedigital.  To this role she 
brings a strong background in conceptual thinking and experimental performance 
practice in dance improvisation, somatics, live arts and new media.  ​Through 
the organisation, she supports and nurtures artists working with dance and new 
technologies, seeks to develop conversations with practitioners across 
disciplines and engages in research to develop thinking, tools and products for 
the dance sector.  As a researcher, Tamara has focused upon the application of 
qualitative research paradigms to creative and practical research. Tamara has 
undertaken studies that explore dance improvisation and somatics in 
environmental and digital performance, with publications in the Choreographic 
Practices Journal; Theatre, Dance and Performance and Training; Contact 
Quarterly and has published book chapters on choreography, site-sensitive 
performance and improvisation.  A committed educator, she lectures on practice 
as research in the PhD programme at the University of Limerick and is a Senior 
Lecturer in Dance at the University of Bedfordshire. 


Simon Biggs
si...@littlepig.org.uk  |  @_simonbiggs_ 
http://www.littlepig.org.uk  |  http://amazon.com/author/simonbiggs

simon.bi...@unisa.edu.au  |  Professor of Art, University of South Australia
http://www.unisanet.unisa.edu.au/staff/homepage.asp?name=simon.biggs

s.bi...@ed.ac.uk  |  Honorary Professor, Edinburgh College of Art, University 
of Edinburgh
http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/edinburgh-college-art/school-of-art/staff/staff?person_id=182&cw_xml=profile.php

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