PIPP #1 - Pedestrian Interaction Patch Project


Autoria(s): Delbridge, Matthew
Data(s)

01/10/2008

Resumo

The Pedestrian Interaction Patch Project (PIPP) seeks to exert influence over and encourage abnormal pedestrian behavior. By placing an unadvertised (and non recording) interactive video manipulation system and projection source in a high traffic public area, the PIPP allows pedestrians to privately (and publically) re-engage with a previously inactive physical environment, like a commonly used walkway or corridor. This system, the results of which are projected in real time on the architectural surface, inadvertently provides pedestrians with questions around preconceived notions of self and space. In an attempt to re-activate our relationship with the physical surrounds we occupy each day the PIPP creates a new set of memories to be recalled as we re-enter known environments once PIPP has moved on and as such re-enlivens our relationship with the everyday architecture we stroll past everyday. The PIPP environment is controlled using the software program Isadora, devised by Mark Coniglio at Troika Ranch, and contains a series of video manipulation patches that are designed to not only grab the pedestrians attention but to also encourage a sense of play and interaction between the architecture, the digital environment, the initially unsuspecting participant(s) and the pedestrian audience. The PIPP was included as part of the planned walking tour for the “Playing in Urban Spaces” seminar day, and was an installation that ran for the length of the symposium in a reclaimed pedestrian space that was encountered by both the participants and general public during the course of the day long event. Ideally once discovered PIPP encouraged pedestrians to return through the course of the seminar day to see if the environmental patches had changed or altered, and changed their standard route to include the PIPP installation or to avoid it, either way, encouraging an active response to the pathways normally traveled or newly discovered each day.

Formato

video/quicktime

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/34132/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/34132/1/Leeds_PIPP.mov

Delbridge, Matthew (2008) PIPP #1 - Pedestrian Interaction Patch Project. [Inter-arts]

Direitos

Copyright 2008 Matthew Delbridge

Fonte

Drama; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #190205 Interactive Media #190404 Drama Theatre and Performance Studies #Interactive performance #Video art #Interactive Scenography
Tipo

Creative Work