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  1. The Forever Club

    The Forever Club is an ensemble web comedy using a mash-up of videos, texts, interactive elements, animations, audio, memes, and visual remnants of social media.

    (Source: http://thenewriver.us/the-forever-club/)

    Carlos Muñoz - 26.09.2018 - 15:03

  2. Concert by Fonofone

    Concert by Fonofone

    Jane Lausten - 26.09.2018 - 15:05

  3. Our Cupidity Coda

    There’s an aspect of current Virtual reality that underplays an emphasis on the personal, the poetic, the introspective, and the spaces that exist in between. Our Cupidity Coda seeks to address this by creating (what I term) a MicroVR Experience: a poetic snapshot of the life span of a romantic relationship, bridging the gap between the impersonal and the intimate. 

    The meat of the project is a set of poetic texts interspersed with 360 illustrative stills. The work is deliberately designed to partially echo the conventions from early film-making days (including no audio), making a viewer focus on text inserts, which are contrasted with having to move (turn in the 360 VR space) and view the 360 tableaus (a reflection of the theme underlying the work) to engage fully with the 360 illustration sections. 

    Akvile Sinkeviciute - 26.09.2018 - 15:07

  4. Pacific Surfliner: San Juan Capistrano

     

    Pacific Surfliner is one in a series of videos that map the route of the Pacific Surfliner along the California coast – San Diego to San Luis Obispo.  In so doing, they trace a kind of life story of a certain generation in time – arrivals and departures over the years, joy and loss. While San Juan Capistrano is a kind of central piece, touching on many life transformations, each piece takes a central emotion from its location.  The individual videos are layered with images, sound, and text –experimenting with storytelling modes.  

     

    Author's statement: 

    Spoken screens:  the gap between presence and performance.  One of the challenging issues with e-literature has been the relationship between reading a work and watching it performed.  Some time-based or video work discourages the performative reading aspect altogether.  Pacific Surfliner suggests a new approach – a text-rich, time-based piece that can be performed (or read silently).

    Li Yi - 26.09.2018 - 15:10

  5. It Must Have Been Dark By Then

    It Must Have Been Dark By Then' is a book and audio experience that uses a mixture of evocative music, narration and field recording to bring you stories of changing environments, from the swamplands of Louisiana, to empty Latvian villages and the edge of the Tunisian Sahara. Unlike many audio guides, there is no preset route, the software builds a unique map for each person’s experience. It is up to you to choose your own path through the city, connecting the remote to the immediate, the precious to the disappearing. 

    Source: https://sites.grenadine.uqam.ca/sites/nt2/en/elo2018/schedule/1465/It+Mu...

    Amirah Mahomed - 26.09.2018 - 15:11

  6. Remixing Shakespeare : Witch Hunts! Power Plays! & Uses of Adversity. A Netprov in Three Acts

    This project remixes video vignettes of the character contests from Shakespeare with the power-plays of our time. The work features multi-layered video and a crowd-sourced text feed, pulled from public domain and social media. Netprov players add their own words to the text flow, contributing to the politico/poetical drama.

    “Sweet are the uses of adversity,
    Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous,
    Wears yet a precious jewel in his head;
    And this our life, exempt from public haunt,
    Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,
    Sermons in stones, and good in everything.”

    Jane Lausten - 26.09.2018 - 15:11

  7. Why did you cry when you read that poem

    Why did you cry when you read that poem

    Carlos Muñoz - 26.09.2018 - 15:11

  8. Fractalize 1: I've loved you from afar

    FRACTALIZE is a hypermedia fiction project created by Tony Vieira, with Lesley Loksi Chan and Arthur Yeung. The first installment, ”I've loved you from Afar,” is a fractal reminiscence of a romance across space and time. Created for Supercrawl 2017, a four day art and indie music festival in Hamilton, Canada, Fractalize is intended to exist both inside a gallery space as much as within the audience member’s smartphone. Narrative “fractals” will be delivered over the course of the five day ELO Conference and Festival via email and social media, with intentional knowledge gaps that users fill in based on their own experience, anxieties, and desires. Users experience the project in the form of VR/360º video gallery exhibit, video walks, web videos, photographs, original music, text messages, sound art, Spotify playlists, and social media posts. Characters within the narrative have their own social media identities which are regularly updated over the course of the exhibition, creating a blurring of the lines that separate reality and virtuality.

    Nina Kolovic - 26.09.2018 - 15:12

  9. The Automatic Writing Machine

    The Automatic Writing Machine

    Jana Jankovska - 26.09.2018 - 15:13

  10. Replicant

    Inspired by the “They Might Be Giants” song of the same name, Replicant is a psychological sci-fi thriller which uses the interactive fiction medium to explore memory, humanity, and identity, and asks, what really makes us the people we are? Our physical bodies? Our life experience? The truths we tell others? A person wakes up in a mysterious lab with no memories of their previous life and nothing to go on but their own name. This work was created for the Nanobots album, a collection of Twine games based on They Might Be Giants songs, which can be found at http://nanobots.shark.moe/. Content warning for gore

    Jane Lausten - 26.09.2018 - 15:17

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