AUTHENTIC IN ALL CAPS: A web audio adventure

AnimatedLadyonCouch_bySimonHowe

AUTHENTIC IN ALL CAPS, a “web audio adventure” by Christy Dena, Craig Peebles, Trevor Dikes and Simon Howe, is the kind of project I’d love to see more of on the web. Described as “a unique audio experience that combines radio drama and web navigation,” AIAC uses the process of visiting and traversing among websites as an opportunity for story-rich flanerie.

Taking its cues from both the time-tested (and, in my opinion, much undervalued) art of radio drama, and the more recent practice of real-world locative storytelling, AIAC presents a hybrid experience that promises to mix the active engagement modes inherent in web navigation with more reflective or readerly modes of story apprehension.

We’ve created this new way to experience the web. What we’ve done is create a unique audio experience that combines radio drama and web navigation. But the websites you go to will all be fictional ones we’ve created especially for this experience.

You’ll download an app to play on your iPad. Once open, you’ll be guided by a narrator and the characters as they travel across the web to their fictional websites. So you’ll hear the drama unfold, see the fictional websites, and click around the web with the characters. (Pozible.com: AUTHENTIC IN ALL CAPS)

AUTHENTICteampic

I’ve known Christy for a few years now, and she’s always at the forefront of imagining new ways of leveraging new media to mix storytelling and play. AIAC demonstrates that she’s continuing along that path. The project is presently in the stretch run of a funding drive, so head over to Pozible and help bring this new kind of interactive story experience into the world.

Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , , , | 10 Comments

Essential Reading: The Work of Art in the Age of Mediated Participation

levels

Anyone interested in “the practice of using the Internet as a participatory platform to directly engage the public in the creation of visual, musical, literary, or dramatic [artworks]” should not miss Ioana Literat‘s fantastic paper, The Work of Art in the Age of Mediated Participation, freely available through the International Journal of Communication.

Among many other important insights, Literat’s paper presents a concise breakdown of what she calls “The Levels of Artistic Participation,” identifying the affordances of “receptive,” “executory,” and “structural” participation via a series of contemporary and historical examples.

Literat’s analysis can provide critical designers with important tools for working through the many ethical and practical challenges presented by what I’m calling “participation design.” For theorists, students, and designers alike, this paper is not to be missed.

More: follow Ioana Literat on Twitter.

Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Untitled

Untitled

Filter: Mayfair

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on Untitled

Chinook sunset

Chinook sunset

Filter: X-Pro II

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on Chinook sunset

A Cartography of the Anthropocene

A Cartography of the Anthropocene from global citizenship organization Globaia presents a collection of evocative maps of energy use, transportation networks, population, airline routes, atmospheric CO2 concentration, and more:

NeoGraphic2

Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Mine Kafon

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0dWZ7dsCes

The Mine Kafon is a “low-cost wind-powered mine detonator” that’s light enough to be blown by the wind, tumbleweed-style, across war-ravaged landscapes, but heavy enough to actually set off any mines it happens to roll over.

In countries with war-ravaged pasts, concealed landmines pose a silent, hidden threat. Lurking underground for years, they risk throwing open fresh wounds in communities which are just beginning to heal.

Afghanistan, a country with a long history of war, is dotted with these subterranean dangers. According to one report, about 1 million Afghans live within 500 meters of areas expected to contain landmines. Recently, a group of 10 girls lost their lives when they encountered a hidden mine on a routine outing to gather wood. On average, landmines claim about 42 lives every month.

This “Mine Kafon” is a spherical mobile made out of biodegradable plastic and bamboo. It’s light enough that the wind would–in theory–push it around naturally. But it is also heavy enough to set off landmines as it rolls over them.

“With each detonation the Mine Kafon loses just one or two legs so it could potentially destroy three or four landmines in one journey

The Mine Kafon, at this prototype stage, has been exhibited at the London Design Museum, Milan Design Week, Helsinki Museum, Dutch Design Week, Lodz Design Festival and acquired by MOMA in New York. (Kickstarter: Mine Kafon)

Massoud Hassani and the team behind Mine Kafon are currently seeking funding on Kickstarter. Help them out here.

Via @lanceweiler

kafon

Posted in Blog | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Mine Kafon

Untitled

Untitled

Filter: Earlybird

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on Untitled

Big skies, fresh air, beautiful day in the coulee.

Big skies, fresh air, beautiful day in the coulee.

Location: Fort Whoop-Up

Filter: Nashville

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on Big skies, fresh air, beautiful day in the coulee.

Winners of Reality 2012

Winners of Reality 2012

Filter: Sierra

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on Winners of Reality 2012

A group of students camped out in front of the game office last night. Explained themselves w/ this sign…

A group of students camped out in front of the game office last night. Explained themselves w/ this sign…

Filter: X-Pro II

Posted in Photos | Tagged | Comments Off on A group of students camped out in front of the game office last night. Explained themselves w/ this sign…