‘MINDtouch’ – embodied ephemeral transference: mobile media performance research
Baker, Camille (2011) ‘MINDtouch’ – embodied ephemeral transference: mobile media performance research. The International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7 (1). pp. 99-118. ISSN 1479-4713 (Print) 2040-0934 (Online)
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The aim of the author's media art research has been to uncover any new understandings of the sensations of 'liveness' and 'presence' that may emerge in participatory networked performance, using mobile phones and physiological wearable devices. To practically investigate these concepts, a mobile media performance series was created, called ‘MINDtouch'.
The MINDtouch project proposed that the mobile videophone become a new way to communicate non-verbally, visually and sensually across space. It explored notions of ephemeral transference, distance collaboration and participant as performer to study 'presence' and 'liveness' emerging from the use of wireless mobile technologies within real-time, mobile performance contexts. Through participation by in-person and remote interactors, creating mobile video-streamed mixes, the project interweaves and embodies a daisy chain of technologies through the network space.
As part of a practice-based PhD research conducted at the SMARTlab Digital Media Institute at the University of East London, MINDtouch has been under the direction of Professor Lizbeth Goodman and sponsored by BBC R&D. The aim of this article is to discuss the project research, conducted and had been recently completed for submission (when this article was written), in terms of the technical and aesthetic developments from 2008 to present, as well as the final phase of staging the events from July 2009 to February 2010.
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