The Talking Quilt – Augmenting Domestic Objects for Communal Meaning-Making
Author(s) -
Sara Heitlinger,
Nick Bryan–Kinns,
Tony Stockman,
Orla O’Flanagan,
Tarot Couzyn
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
electronic workshops in computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 1477-9358
DOI - 10.14236/ewic/eva2012.36
Subject(s) - quilt , visual arts , meaning (existential) , everyday life , object (grammar) , sociology , aesthetics , computer science , multimedia , human–computer interaction , art , psychology , artificial intelligence , political science , law , psychotherapist
The Talking Quilt is a traditional textiles quilt that has been augmented with digital technology to allow for enjoyable and reflective engagement. Produced by over 80 staff, volunteers and visitors to an urban city farm in East London, the quilt presents a snapshot of the farm at this point in time. New technology in the form of RFID (radio frequency identification) buttons that trigger playback of oral history interviews is used to bring the everyday domestic object to life, to make it contemporary, and to augment the experience of interacting with it without changing its qualities as a visual, tactile, and hand-made object. Rather than aiming for a solely playful interaction, the research looked at how socially meaningful themes integral to the quilt ‐ i.e. food, food growing and community ‐ could be communicated through the interaction to a collective audience.
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