This course re-conceives interactive media as a form of choreographic intervention. Instead of asking how moving bodies can control media, we will ask how interactive systems can influence movement. How do you make someone feel soft inside? How do you shake an entire room? How do you orchestrate duets between strangers? To accomplish this, the class facilitates a semester-long collaboration between ITP students and dancers from the Barnard/Columbia Dance Department. Choreographers will learn to apply computational thinking to choreography and creative coders will learn to apply choreographic thinking to computation. To whatever extent possible, we will attempt to embody code. Using computer vision and visual media, we will look at directing both how people move (quality of movement) as well as where they move (pathways and spatial relationships). We will evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the various sensing technologies available to us today. How wide is the gulf between what we can see and feel (strength, hardness, contortion) and what a computer can see and interpret (locations, contours, velocity, acceleration)? Class time will be split between movement exercises, playing with examples and deconstructing code. The class will culminate in a final showing of student work. PLEASE NOTE: This class requires travel to The Movement Lab in The Milstein Center at Barnard College: 3009, Broadway, New York, NY 10027 (~1hour by subway each way). Final schedule of whether we will be meeting at Barnard every week or on alternating weeks depends on the construction schedule for the 2nd Floor Media Commons at 370 Jay. *** Please be advised that this is a 10-seat class. ***
ITPG-GT.2175.1 () | Instructor: Mimi (Yue) Yin | Mon 7:00pm to 9:55pm | Meeting Pattern: 12 | Start Date