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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

Designing in the living archive: software and representation

Stanton, Reuben
2015

This chapter traces the viewing and reviewing of the video record of Circus Oz performances over the course of their history as a company. Circus as an art form institutionalises repetition, whether exact or variations on a theme. It focuses on a set of musical clowning acts, demonstrate a set of paradigmatic relationships that are played out through multiple variations. Paul Bouissac considers the circus act as a communicative text that is open to a structural analysis and provides many examples in his seminal work Circus and Culture, a position elaborated further in a recent work, Semiotics at the Circus. The relationship between maestro and clown-musician in these two orchestral acts replicates the traditional auguste and whiteface clown relationship, a staple of European clown routines during the twentieth century. The Circus Oz Living Archive, with its multitude of recorded single-spectator positions, offers the possibility to change the register and focus of analysis open to the circus researcher.
This chapter traces the viewing and reviewing of the video record of Circus Oz performances over the course of their history as a company. Circus as an art form institutionalises repetition, whether exact or variations on a theme. It focuses on a set of musical clowning acts, demonstrate a set of paradigmatic relationships that are played out through multiple variations. Paul Bouissac considers the circus act as a communicative text that is open ...

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ETUDES, GUIDES ET RAPPORTS

Acts of design : archives, material and intention in the Circus Oz living archive project

Stanton, Reuben
Melbourne : RMIT University - Philosophy, 2014

This research presents an account of a doctoral inquiry undertaken as an embedded practitioner and researcher, in the context of the Circus Oz Living Archive Project, an interdisciplinary research project conducted at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. This project was a three-year investigation into the creation of an online digital ‘living archive’: a collection of historical performance videos, combined with an intention to rethink existing paradigms of contemporary performance archives. As an embedded practitioner and researcher, my doctoral research was led by the question of how might we design a living archive? My approach has been one of research-through-practice, in which I have undertaken the design and creation of a prototype digital archive as both a pragmatic design act and as a research activity. Informed by discourse and literature from a wide range of academic areas, I critically reflect on the work undertaken in the design of this digital archive, in order to investigate some aspects of the roles and agency of an interaction designer engaged in its creation. By bringing together contemporary theories of the performance archive, conceptions of digital practice and digital materiality from the field of Software Studies, and Verbeek’s notion of material hermeneutics (2005), I examine the practice of Interaction Design, in the context of a project concerned with designing and making a contemporary digital performance archive. I argue that the work of a designer in this context is one of mediating hermeneutic relations with the archive through the creation of specific software representations. It is also one of executing agency through the use of performative design artefacts. This is an often opaque, yet powerful role, in which the decisions made by designers—along with the decisions enabled by the work of designers in the day-to-day process of collaboratively making the archive—ultimately affect society’s relation with the archive. The effects of design decisions have implications for contemporary cultural heritage and future cultural understanding. The concept of a ‘living archive’ suggests that the digital archive is not a singular thing to design, but rather an extensible cultural resource that has the capacity to live and be re-designed throughout its life. I also argue that the role of the designer in this process is ultimately one in which they must act with certain intention: in designing a ‘living archive’, designers have a responsibility to engage non-designers in making decisions about the archive’s representation. They also have a responsibility to demystify the process of making software, such that acts of cultural mediation performed by the digital archive can be enacted in well-informed, intentional, and respectful ways. [author summary]
This research presents an account of a doctoral inquiry undertaken as an embedded practitioner and researcher, in the context of the Circus Oz Living Archive Project, an interdisciplinary research project conducted at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. This project was a three-year investigation into the creation of an online digital ‘living archive’: a collection of historical performance videos, combined with an intention to rethink ...


Cote : 026.791 3 S7921a 2014

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place
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ETUDES, GUIDES ET RAPPORTS

Multimodal experiments in the design of living archive

Vaughan, Laurene ; Yuille, Jeremy ; Thom, James ; Stanton, Reuben ; Mullet, Jane ; Miles, Adrian ; Iwan, Lukman Hakim ; Carlin, David
Copenhagen, Denmark : The Nordic Design Research Conference, p.144- 152, 2013

Designing a ‘living archive’ that will enable new forms of circus performance to be realised is a complex and dynamic challenge. This paper discusses the methods and approaches used by the research team in the design of the Circus Oz Living archive. Essential to this project has been the design of a responsive methodology that could embrace the diverse areas of knowledge and practice that have led to a design outcome that integrates the affordances of the circus with those of digital technologies. The term ‘living archive’ has been adopted as a means to articulate the dynamic nature of the archive. This is an archive that will always be evolving, not only because of the on going collection of content, but more importantly
because the performance of the archive users will themselves become part of the archive collection. [authors summary]
Designing a ‘living archive’ that will enable new forms of circus performance to be realised is a complex and dynamic challenge. This paper discusses the methods and approaches used by the research team in the design of the Circus Oz Living archive. Essential to this project has been the design of a responsive methodology that could embrace the diverse areas of knowledge and practice that have led to a design outcome that integrates the ...


Cote : 026.791 3 V364m 2013

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place
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