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| Content Provider | ACM Digital Library |
|---|---|
| Author | Bachrach, Jonathan Breyer, Nell |
| Abstract | I:move is a performance / installation series that explores how we perceive movement. It embeds daily activities into formal choreography and is being developed for public spaces that are bottlenecks of human motion. It has been shown at MIT's IM Pei archway and the DTW gallery space.Pedestrian traffic is tracked and transformed into 2-dimensional shadow play. Continuous motion trails occur like reliable yet unpredictable weather patterns. I:move captures and processes these daytime patterns, imbedding them into video projection. Pedestrians become performers. Live motion folds into the piece, revealing layers of text or motion streams that echo earlier daytime movements in the space. Through i:move, your motion reveals varying speeds, rhythms and dynamic patterns occurring at the site, over a 24-hour cycle. I:move encourages dancers and novices to explore their own movements, in relation to the routine, theater, and ritual of cycles in a public space.I:move considers human movements over multiple time scales, perspectives, and magnifications. Video processing is used to enhance contrast, reveal coincidences, and layer time-coded realities. Interactive video is used to engage viewers in playful experimentation. Audiences create and perform inside the motion projections. In this way, i:move celebrates the personal and collective movements of each day.The i:move series is rendered entirely by a stream processing lisp dialect called Gooze. Gooze is a concise, powerful, and efficient expression of time-oriented computing allowing highly profitable domain specific optimizations. It is a unique design, combining movementcentric parameters to extract the perceptual features of motion from video. |
| Starting Page | 314 |
| Ending Page | 314 |
| Page Count | 1 |
| File Format | |
| ISBN | 1581137877 |
| DOI | 10.1145/1013115.1013164 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) |
| Publisher Date | 2004-08-01 |
| Publisher Place | New York |
| Access Restriction | Subscribed |
| Subject Keyword | Multimedia Video processing Interactive Real-time Stream processing Motion analysis |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
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