Hacking the Body 2.0: Flutter/Stutter
Baker, Camille and Sicchio, Kate and Mooney, Tara Baoth and Stewart, Rebecca (2016) Hacking the Body 2.0: Flutter/Stutter. In: International Conference on Live Interfaces, 29 June - 3 July 2016, University of Sussex, UK.
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Flutter/Stutter is an improvisational dance piece, part of the Hacking the Body 2.0 project, that uses networked soft circuit sensors to trigger sound and haptic actuators in the form of a small motor that tickles the performers. Dancers embody the flutter of the motor and respond with their own movement that reflects this feeling. This research explores using the concept of hacking data to repurpose and re-imagine biofeedback from the body. It investigates understandings of states of the body and hacking them to make new artworks such as performance and costumes. Through performance we aim to communicate to the public new ways to engage with their bodies and technology with intimacy and sensation embedded in wearables.
Published in the Proceedings of the International Conference on Live Interfaces, p. 37-40, ISBN 9780993199684.
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