|
The Interactive Media program at Alfred University
has recently developed out of an interest in the technological
art object's ability to be potentially manipulated
by the actions and experiences of its audience.
Emerging out of the strong commitment to real time
image processing found in the Video Arts program
and Print Media's engagement with image as both
a physical and electronic process, the program is
designed
to facilitate an understanding that both still and
time based media are
potential landscapes for interactive research and
exploration. While the
very nature of interactivity imbues the daily use
of computers, Interactive
Media asks, "What constitutes an interactive
artwork?" To unearth this
question, students will be given a foundation in theories
and practices
evolving out of interactive experiments in the arts
that may include but
are not limited to instructional art, public performance,
mail art, installation, real time image processing,
and net art.
Rather than focusing on the mediation of an art experience
entirely predetermined, Interactive Media facilitates
an inquiry into the possible dialogues between program
and user on a number of different levels and through
an array of media. For instance, a web object initiated
on a touch screen may be turned and examined by the
movement of one's hand. With a click it could open
access to a Quicktime movie, a still image and/or
an interactive file that engages audio through further
exploration. The courses move conceptually from low-tech
practice towards hi-tech
experience, as students explore genres of interactivity
including performance; installation; web,CD-ROM and
DVD authoring. To facilitate this artistic inquiry,
students will learn the latest interactive authoring
software including Flash, Director, Dreamweaver, and
DVD Studio Pro.
The program also encourages interactive experimentation
in alternative installation venues that include working
with touch screen technologies built into existing
architectures and via mobile kiosks. In keeping with
the interdisciplinary spirit of the Division of Expanded
Media, students are also encouraged to expand beyond
the concept of interface as mouse, keyboard, screen
and touchscreen to conceive alternative interface
design via video/computer projections onto site-specific
locales and/or upon other media.
|