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  1. La grande fabrique de mots

    Adaptation of The great word factory by Agnès de Lestrade and Valeria Docampo

    Plot:
    Paul and Marie live in a land where people can hardly speak, as words have to be bought and are often expensive. Nevertheless, the protagonists try to collect words to communicate and express their mutual sympathy.

    The app contains: multimodal elements, animations, interactions and mini-games.

    Eleonora Acerra - 10.03.2017 - 14:54

  2. They Have Large Eyes and Can See In All Directions

    They Have Large Eyes and Can See In All Directions is a reinterpretation of texts mixed with extracts from books on psychometry written by William Denton and diaries written by his sons concerning their experiences in Melbourne in August 1882.

    Sherman and Shelley went collecting skins in Panton Hill and Pheasant Creek while William remained in the city to speak at Spiritualist meetings.

    (Source: https://thecodeofthings.com/poems/they-have-large-eyes)

    Alvaro Seica - 08.04.2017 - 20:48

  3. The Dice Player

    'The Dice Player' is an Animated Poetry film that visualizes a poem written by the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish. It was recited in the live event 'In the Shade of Words' 2008, along with harmonies by the band Le Trio Joubran. (English subtitles are available)

    This is a Bachelor project made in the faculty of Applied Sciences and Arts in the GUC

    Seamus Riordan-Short - 07.06.2017 - 20:43

  4. Alice 3.0

    Alice 3.0

    Diogo Marques - 27.07.2017 - 12:15

  5. 18 Cadence

    18 Cadence is a storymaking machine where readers explore a house through a hundred years of history. Any piece of the story can be dragged and dropped onto a workspace area and repositioned, merged, and remixed, like magnetic fridge poetry for narrative. Readers can share and exchange the stories they make this way, and have created poetry, counter-narratives, collages, and many other stories and experiments. 18 Cadence was a Kirkus Reviews “Best Book App” of 2013, and received Honorable Mentions for the prestigious IGF Nuovo award and the Robert Coover Award for a Work of Electronic Literature.

    Diogo Marques - 27.07.2017 - 13:03

  6. Lil’ Red

    This cute interactive story offers a reimagining of “Little Red Riding Hood.” Designed to appeal to literate and preliterate audiences (as young as two years old), the game offers twelve exploratory animated scene peppered with hidden mini games. The work uses touch and tilt to allow the interactor to discover the story while engaging the affordances of mobile devices. Interactors are free to explore the tale at their own pace, as the wolf stalks over to granny’s house. However, created for even the youngest of audiences, the wolf merely shoves granny into a closet, rather than eating her. Rendered in white, black, and grey (with a hint of red), this app’s aesthetic draws upon the style of Japanese anime and contemporary animation. Backed by an immersive soundtrack, the piece offers a delightfully modern retelling of this classic tale.

    (Source: Description from ELO 2017: Book of Abstracts and Catalogs)

    Pål Alvsaker - 07.09.2017 - 17:04

  7. The Pond at Deuchar

    This is an original art publication made for the iPad. Scroll, glide and plumb the depths of Helen Douglas's The Pond at Deuchar, exploring with your fingers and eyes this long unfolding artwork showing the multitude of life at the fringes of a pond.

    As you move past frog and toads you encounter arabesques of toad spawn, squiggles of tadpoles and other denizens of the pond. Plants embroider the edge and, intermingling with reflections, weave from below to the surface of the water and screen. All contribute to a dance of light, colour, surface and depth.

    Source: Clive Phillpot: http://www.weproductions.com/epub.html 

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 12:39

  8. A Narrated Portrait

    Eileen Hogan, the Co-Investigator in the research network, presented a screen-based project showing sketches and paintings she had made between 2008 and 2011 at the third workshop. The project explored how the experience of creating a portrait might be affected by the simultaneous recording of an audio life story with the sitter. Hogan sketched Anya Sainsbury while the latter was being interviewed by Cathy Courtney, Project Director for National Life Stories at the British Library. The resulting drawings in Hogan’s sketchbook, the final portraits, Anya Sainsbury’s recorded words and a short film of one session were brought together in A Narrated Portrait 2008–2011. Hogan soon realised that rather than being a new version of existing work, A Narrated Portrait was a new multi-media work in its own right which allowed viewers to listen to sound recordings and watch the film while virtually turning the pages of the sketchbook.

    Ana Castello - 16.10.2017 - 13:15

  9. Grand Theft Auto V

    Grand Theft Auto V is an action-adventure video game developed by Rockstar North and published by Rockstar Games. It was released on 17 September 2013 for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, on 18 November 2014 for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, and on 14 April 2015 for Microsoft Windows.

    Filip Falk - 19.10.2017 - 20:30

  10. The Last of Us

    The Last of Us is an action-adventure survival horror video game developed by Naughty Dog and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was released for the PlayStation 3 worldwide on June 14, 2013.

    Players control Joel, a smuggler tasked with escorting a teenage girl named Ellie across a post-apocalyptic United States. The Last of Us is played from a third-person perspective; players use firearms and improvised weapons, and can use stealth to defend against hostile humans and cannibalistic creatures infected by a mutated strain of the cordyceps fungus. In the game's online multiplayer mode, up to eight players engage in cooperative and competitive gameplay.

    (Source: Wikipedia)

    Juan Manuel Altadill Casas - 26.10.2017 - 11:23

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