An Another Language Production
InterPlay: Loose Minds in a Box
April 15 - 16, 21:00 EDT and April 17, 18:00 EDT
ArtGrid Virtual Venue Theater
https://bazaar01.chpc.utah.edu/Venues/default and
http://www.anotherlanguage.org/interplay


University of Utah
INSCC Auditorium
155 South 1452 East
Salt Lake City, UT

Contact: Jimmy Miklavcic, 801-585-9335, 
j...@chpc.utah.edu<mailto:j...@chpc.utah.edu>

For Immediate Release:

It was like a page from history. One could imagine seeing Alexander Graham Bell 
speaking, for the first time, through a strange black device to his assistant 
Watson, "Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you." In a recent and similar 
experiment, Charles Nichols, Professor of Music at the University of Montana, 
Missoula, sits in front of his desktop computer and tells Many Ayromlou, 
Research Engineer at Ryerson University, Toronto, Ontario, CA, who is sitting 
at the MIDI control keyboard, to play high C. He presses the key in Toronto and 
the sound jumps out in Missoula.

This is just a small example of some of the exciting preparations in process 
for Another Language's latest excursion into the fascinating merger of art and 
technology. Another Language celebrates its 20th Anniversary with its newest 
production of InterPlay: Loose Minds in a Box. This InterPlay is a 
multi-faceted telematic event that consists of six simultaneous performances 
that occur in six states throughout North America. The performances incorporate 
theater, text, music, performance art, virtual reality, and motion capture and 
are concurrently captured, mixed, digitized, encoded and streamed onto the 
network.

Loose Minds in a Box is a collaborative work that explores the basic concept of 
the "box". The box is a metaphor for the physical, social, political or 
psychological constraints that we and/or others place upon us. The box also 
represents a sense of place in the realm of the virtual as well as in our 
sub-conscience. With the aid of performance artists, electro-acoustic 
musicians/composers, virtual reality and motion capture artists/technologists 
and others, we look at many of the numerous representations the "box" 
encompasses. In Utah, Another Language's Artistic Director, Beth Miklavcic, 
will perform in a closet, investigating how our personalities are bounded by 
the clothes we wear. Sculptor, Eric Brown, will slowly construct an enclosure 
around himself depicting how we encase ourselves in a social fortress. It 
either protects us from unwanted human contact or keeps us from interacting 
with the outside world.

In Maryland, Nadja Masura plays with the box that we live in. Using video 
processing techniques, Nadja will place remote performers into different rooms 
of her favorite doll house. Nicholas Bartoli and Brian Buck will dance within 
the constraining characteristics of the video box as well as augmenting Beth 
Miklavcic's "clothes encounter" by changing their personalities with new 
fashions.

A team of artists in Indiana include Dioselin Gonzalez (VR designer), T. J. 
Rogers (motion performance), Carol Cunningham (choreographer), David Sigman 
(graphic designer) and Joe Hayes (dancer). They will delve into the virtual box 
where a performer transmits him self through a bazaar world of unique 
characters and environments, created by Miho Aoki in Alaska and David Sigman. 
At times, Joe Hayes will remotely control, through movement, electro-acoustic 
music in Montana.

The concept of confinement will be explored by artists Tina Shah and 
Helen-Nicole Kostis in Chicago, Illinois.  The audience will participate by 
imprisoning the performer and witnessing the physical effects of isolation 
while at the same time viewing the metamorphosis of the performer's psyche in a 
VR world.

Charles Nichols, composer and violinist in Missoula Montana, will probe the 
musical possibilities of the "black box". Scott Deal, composer and 
percussionist in Fairbanks Alaska will toy with numerous box icons such as a 
music box and Pandora's box. The music is transmitted to all sites in real 
time, providing the entire work with piercing percussion and wild melodies.

Back in Utah, Director Jimmy Miklavcic, will wrangle more than twenty video 
streams from all six sites, mix and process them for the local Utah audience 
and then stream the processed videos back onto the Internet for audiences at 
the other five sites. Local audiences at all sites will experience the local 
performance with the infusion of live multimedia and video events.

Additional technical support is provide by Paul Mercer and Bill Brody (Alaska), 
Dwight McKay and Mike Bass (Purdue), Sam Liston (Utah), Chris Rosenthal and 
Gideon Goldman (Illinois), Robert Wachtel (Montana) and David McNabb (Maryland).

Another Language, in collaboration with all the participating artists and 
technologists, is forging a new performance form not yet experienced here in 
Utah. InterPlay: Loose Minds in a Box is the most innovative merging of 
Internet technology with the performing arts to date. The form brings together 
artists from unique backgrounds and geographical locations that would normally 
never occur under traditional collaborative processes. The power of the 
Internet and video conference technology enables and empowers this consortium 
of artists to expand their ideas of artistic creativity. The performance can be 
viewed on the Access Grid at the new ArtGrid virtual venue in the Theater 
(https://bazaar01.chpc.utah.edu/Venues/default) and through QuickTime at 
http://www.anotherlanguage.org/interplay.

Loose Minds in a Box is supported in part by the University of Utah Center for 
High Performance Computing, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Arctic Region 
Supercomputing Center, University of Montana, the University of Illinois, 
Chicago, Purdue University, the University of Maryland, the Zoo, Arts and Parks 
Program, the Utah Arts Council and the Salt Lake City Arts Council and 
contributing members of Another Language.

--
Jimmy Miklavcic
Multimedia Specialist
j...@chpc.utah.edu<mailto:j...@chpc.utah.edu>

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH
CTR FOR HIGH PERFORM COMPUTING
155 SOUTH 1452 EAST RM 405
SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84112-0190

Office: 801.585.9335
Fax: 801.585.5366

http://www.chpc.utah.edu/~jhm
http://www.anotherlanguage.org

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