October 2009

A letter about a dream

1031_1letter

Dear Phil and Elise,

 

How is your Halloween so far? 

 

Recently, I often find myself working on my thesis in my dreams when I am asleep. 

Normally, the results in the dreams aren’t that helpful to me in real life. However, after drinking some whisky at Becker’s Halloween Party yesterday night I had an amazing vision in my dream.  

 

I was brain storming with the MDP members for a project of creating tangible space that has virtual aspects within it.  

 

I was to make a digital domino system that would be interactive in physical space. I had a plan of applying one of Peter Eisenman’s architectural methodology of using mirrors. For me the mirrors were the tools that would be mimicking “COPY PASTE” duplication function in the digital world. 

• By using approximate sensor, the viewer would be able to make the projected domino collapse.

• The projected domino would bounce off mirror displays and then jump into an actual monitor screen. 

 

I am having a feeling that I might regret writing this email to you. I woke up a couple of hours ago and the more my first impression about this dream is fading out the more it seems silly. However, I believe that it might be an interesting starting point for the productive interaction class. I am sure that as I experiment I would come up with some meaningful results. Sorry to steal your precious time in this wonderful weekend. I’ll talk to you in school! 

 

Thank you.

 

Best,

Austin Lee

http://www.austinslee.com/_thesis/

 

31OCT09

Long Term Perspective

1030_1long

 

Today I met a very interesting person. Alexander Rose who is in a project of creating a clock that would last 10,000 years!

Long Now Project Link

 

Indeed, it is a very interesting project that let’s us think about the future and design. 

Arena For Accountable Predictions Link

 

I have been seeing so many people talking about Green, Sustained(sustainable) design for the past few years. I had doubt about the term, Sustained Design for quite a while. It didn’t make that much of a sense to me. Perhaps, if we were to change the whole industrial structure to a sustainable system, it might be different. 

 

Well, Alexander’s presentation today was meaningful to me in the sense that his project actually enables people to think about the future in the long run.

 

When it come to creating design for longevity, I don’t expect myself to come up with something as mind blowing as ‘the 10,000 year clock ‘. However, I do hope that my research could open a new way of seeing the future.

 

 

Exploring meanings of space

Exploring meanings of space.

One day when I was in high school, I saw a caterpillar crawling up my knee. That very day, I made my first song, “Caterpillar” which was about a caterpillar who thought it would turn into a butterfly only to learn that it would eventually become a moth. A few weeks later in the same room, I saw a huge praying mantis hanging by the window. I grabbed my guitar again and made my second song. It has been already 11 years since than. Throughout the years, I have begun to realize that I was not meant to be a musician nor was I talented in playing musical instruments. However, today I still play my guitar and try to make music in my new room, 5646 miles away from the place where I used to make songs about insects. 

 


Imagine being able to return to a place where we can let others understand ourselves. When I share the memory with others, the old room is experienced in the telling of my own story. Indeed, the meaning of a space depends on our memories that tie us to that place. The advantage of being in the world where we live in now is that we become able to handle and share stories about our values, interest, memories instantly using the internet. Similar to the way in which our dwelling-places hold valuable information of former days, our traces in the virtual space leads others to the stories about ourselves. In reality, geographical location is almost meaningless to some people as distant places are connected virtually and instantaneously through the invisible network. For each and one of us, the conceptions and boundaries of our surrounding structure are changing day by day as the pervasive networking technology advances. It may be easy to laugh at the idea of a world where every object and space share their stories in the network cloud and communicate amongst themselves. Yet, in truth, this thought have been thriving over the years not only in science fiction novels from the 1950s but also in Mark Weiser’s essay in ubiquitous computing written in 1988. The cyberspace is no longer considered as merely a parallel universe to the tangible world, rather in a new era of technology, many believe that the physical space will have the aspects of the virtual environment. 

 


This research focuses on exploring the new meanings of architectural space in a world of pervasive computing environment. My belief is that through computation and technology, space will be more considered as a significant medium for effective communication. The goal of my research is to create examples of using space as an instrument of communication. One of my approach will include identifying possible virtual relationships of tangible objects by using technology. This work will focus on understanding the spatial language created by the way in which people behave, occupy and relate themselves to an environment with virtual characteristics. 

 

 


1029_1room

Language Gestures and Space

People create traces as they communicate. Those traces are not memorable things. Yet, the micro expressions, even the smallest gestures from one’s fingertip are engrained to the atmosphere. No matter how cypher they seem to be, the behaviors during a conversation are full of hidden meanings.

 


Taxonomy

The goal of this exploration was to understand a bit more about the relationship between gestures and language. I broke down the video and cropped them to create a taxonomy of gestures that matches certain dialogues.

Firefly

Link to the original video

Fireflies, I used to catch them and have them in my room. It would be interesting to learn how they communicate with one another.

Dancing Honeybee’s Gestures

Link to the original

I was amazed by this footage. This is a video that shows bees using gestures to explain a location. It is really sad that bees are dying.

What is the meaning of space?

Recently, I’ve been reading an essay, ‘walking in the city’ (Michel De Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life, Chapter 7). Also, I’ve been taking lectures from Norman M Klein, a historian in the fields of architecture, media, and culture. Based on Norman M. Klein’s theories on ‘History of Forgetting’ and Michel De Certeau’s essay, ‘walking in the city’, I asked myself a series of questions and threw out my thoughts. 

 

What is the meaning of space?

 

The meaning of a space is constantly changing according to our memories that tie us to that place. These memories create myths about the space that would influence people’s behaviors. The forms of behaviors become a pattern which functions as a spatial language that adds pervasive texture to the space. Thus, people share the meanings of a space through their movements. People’s memory and stories of the place also become part of the space.  

 

What is the relation between people and media?

 

According to Norman Klein, and many other media theorists, for generations, people have been deeply interested in cyborg theories (an example is Donna Haraway’s cyborg manifesto) and tried to identify themselves with cyborgsThe definition of cyborg in a dictionary is ‘a hypothetical person whose physical abilities are extended beyond normal human limitations by mechanical elements built into the body.’  McLuhan’s description of media and technology as extensions of the human body have been repeatedly articulated by many theorists for a remarkably long time. Today another example that support arguments related to identifying people with cyborgs can be found in studying the way in which people use their cell phones. “People carry it with themselves all the time as if they were part of their body. The behaviors of twittering or text messaging are done so intuitively that it almost feels natural.” (07Oct09 Norman Klein’s lecture)

 

Private space as a virtual theatre. 


In a world of pervasive networking and computation, the idea of an embodied and interlinked virtuality can be experienced as an extension of human mind. Through online networking, people are able to duplicate and constantly reproduce virtual representations of themselves to the public. In this world, people create visual simulacrum of their minds through virtual space and ironically, they are able to visit their own minds (representation of themselves) through the pervasive networking system. (‘Being John Malkovich’ depicts this idea of one’s mind(brain) being visited by the public and himself.) 

 

Metaphors of places and gestures.

 

Even though the virtual environment seems to be a parallel universe to the real world, in reality, the planetary networks are all connected to one another through cables in a physical environment. (OneWilshire building in LA downtown) Even when a person surfs the internet and simulates himself going through a journey in the virtual world, in reality, the person is merely looking at the visual representation of signals that were processed from physical data centers. In this sense, distinguishing the virtuality and the reality seems almost meaningless. What interests me the most is the way in which people’s habits, movements, and behaviors connects the two worlds more closer. What is the meaning of space? Can space become a medium for communications? What are the meanings of  gesture in communications?

 

           

Norman M. klein, The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory (New Left Books, Haymarket Series, 1997)

Michel De Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life (University of California Press, 1988, Translated by Steven Rendall)

Marshall McLuhan, The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects (Bantam Books, 1967)

 

Visualization of Gesture Thumbprints During Conversations

1010_04

A collection of individual gesture patterns created during the interview. The photos are long exposure (30 sec) snapshots.

Gestural Drawings and Communication in Space2

Gestural Drawings and Communication in Space 2

An exploration of collecting gestural patterns used in a conversation. This video is an accelerated version.

Idea: After interviewing with a number of students from Art Center College of Design, I learned that some of the gestures of each individuals are similar to thumbprints in the sense that they are unique. 

Goal: Create a collection of gestural thumbprints of different individuals. 

Strategy: The challenge was to intrigue the interviewee to use interesting gestures by allowing him/ her to talk about space and time. I started the interview by asking interviewees to describe about their favorite chapter from Alan Lightman’s novel, Einstein’s Dreams. 

Methodology: I connected LED lights on the fingertips of a pair of dark gloves and made the interviewee wear them during a long conversation in a dark room. I documented the gestural patterns created by the led lights through a HD video camera and took pictures using long exposure through a regular DSLR camera. 

• Interviewer and interviewee of this Video:

Interviewer:
Austin Lee
Designer/ Spatial Communication Researcher
austinslee.com/

Interviewee:
Melissa K.
Environmental Design Major Student
Art Center College of Design