Preliminary Work in Progress Report on Project E-COllaborative generator
In the work of artist Ann Hamilton, The Event of a Thread, the artist used a huge white silk curtain, dozens of swings, the wind brought by the dance of the curtain, the voice of the performer reading aloud, the radio transmitting the sound, writers who write letters about wind and sound in the space, and the pigeons flying through the space, connect every isolated individuals in the large and empty space, bringing in solitude and coexistence together in the art piece.
By creating events in space and making space as the event itself, this artwork has created a space without boundary and let the audience create narratives on the atmosphere and its action per se spontaneously without communication.
Traditionally, we regard the spatial envelope in a building as the boundary separating the external and internal environments or enclosed spaces, and assume that the physical and spatial boundaries are the same. Taking theatre venue as an example, the fixed venue and the stage-auditorium relations to some extent, constrained the possibilities of providing experience that meet the ongoing flow of the society.
Thinking from the perspective of energy exchange, flow and dynamics in architecture, and consequently in terms of gradients, requires a spatial boundary that can negotiate changes and transitions while not simply being isolated from each other.
According to an experiment Coop Himmelb(L)au imagined in 1968, when a room that has no clear boundaries, and in which technology allows us to change our environment, the architectural object becomes a way of communicating directly from body to body.
Inspired by soft architecture and narrative space, our project mobilizes the sense of touch, and connects it with the pneumatics technology, aiming to connect isolated individuals as a whole, creating an experience that is real-engaging corporeally and thus socially, constructing a theatre-like scenario which invites physical engagement and social mobilization.
With soft machine’s immediacy and scalable properties, we established a pneumatic system to conceive huge transformable space where the narrative is situated between the human and the machine. Starting from the basic affordances such as cycling, human’s contribution of their force is transformed through the pumps toward its output component. This is to say, by transferring the output of one function to the input of another function, we may let the shared individual human energy contribute to a collaborative eco-performance. In this open-loop system, with its changeable and scalable deformation, we intended to explore its capabilities of creating different narratives to the extent beyond being predicted by human’s perception.
Reference Parlac, Vera. "Architecture and its (non) permeable boundaries." ARCC Conference Repository. 2019. Pfeifer, Rolf, and Josh Bongard. How the body shapes the way we think: a new view of intelligence. MIT press, 2006. Rufford, Juliet. Theatre and Architecture. Macmillan International Higher Education, 2015. Lutterbie, John H. "Phenomenology and the Dramaturgy of Space and Place." Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism (2001): 123-132.Yuting Chen via Interactive Architecture Lab https://bit.ly/2Sb0LZ5
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