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Designing the Audience Journey through Repeated Experiences
Author(s) -
Steve Benford,
Chris Greenhalgh,
Adrian Hazzard,
Alan Chamberlain,
Maria Kallionpää,
David M. Weigl,
Kevin Page,
Mengdie Lin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nottingham eprints (university of nottingham)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/3173574.3174142
Subject(s) - climb , computer science , human–computer interaction , interpretation (philosophy) , interface (matter) , audience participation , musical , multimedia , visual arts , engineering , art , bubble , maximum bubble pressure method , parallel computing , programming language , aerospace engineering
We report on the design, premiere and public evaluation of a multifaceted audience interface for a complex non-linear musical performance called Climb! which is particularly suited to being experienced more than once. This interface is designed to enable audiences to understand and appreciate the work, and integrates a physical instrument and staging, projected visuals, personal devices and an online archive. A public premiere concert comprising two performances of Climb! revealed how the audience reoriented to the second performance through growing understanding and comparison to the first. Using trajectories as an analytical framework for the audience 'journey' made apparent: how the trajectories of a single performance are embedded within the larger trajectories of a concert and the creative work as a whole; the distinctive demands of understanding and interpretation; and the potential of the archive in enabling appreciation across repeated performances.

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