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live chat
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uninvited guests with
duncan speakman
A
durational intervention into on and offline social spaces.
Live Chat took place simultaneously in Arnolfini Bar, Watershed
Digital Café and online, over 2 nights in December 2002. Two performers
hung out in Arnolfini bar, speaking text face-to-face that was being
written live online in Yahoo chatrooms. Sound and image from the
bar was transmitted wireless across the quay to Watershed’s Digital
Café, where it was projected. Participants at Watershed could join
in the online chat, via the Digital Café’s computers, and hear their
text spoken at Arnolfini after a certain amount of lag. To complete
the loop, video was also streamed back to the web so that people
could log on and participate remotely.
Arnolfini Bar, a real social space located in Bristol, was networked
into the virtual architecture of the web, that is everywhere and
nowhere - though mainly focused in the U.S. The artwork was a network,
its contents authored by knowing and unknowing participants. It
produced a complicated social space that raised questions about
the realness of chat both on and offline, and generated playful
dialogue between these contexts.
Live Chat is available for touring to social spaces and is particularly
suited to performance and new media festival contexts.
To view video of Live Chat click here
Documented at:
www.kleindesign.co.uk/livechat.htm
www.watershed.co.uk/exhibition/digital/listings/live.html
www.psand.net/watershed/
Produced with support from South West Arts’ Matrix
Reflective Practitioner Bursary, awarded to Paul Clarke for professional
development and reflection.
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