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Performing Presence
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CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS: DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS, 1st DECEMBER 2008. Performing Presence: from the live to the simulated An international conference, Centre for Intermedia, University of Exeter, UK, 26-29 March 2009 Performing Presence is the culminating conference of the Arts and Humanities funded interdisciplinary research project, Performing Presence: from the live to the simulated (2005-9). The project is tracked at our major website at http://presence.stanford.edu and our short form site http://projects.exeter.ac.uk/performing-presence/ The Exeter Centre for Intermedia is a University Supported Research Centre that promotes advanced transdisciplinary research in performance and the arts through collaborations between artists, academics and scientists from a range of disciplines. SCOPE OF CONFERENCE, CONFIRMED KEYNOTE SPEAKERS AND CALL FOR PAPERS: SCOPE What creates a sense of presence? - the presence of a live performer ... the presence of the past ... in a memory ... in ruined remains ... the sense of 'being there' in an online community ... in a VR or mixed reality environment ... Presence is a fundamental yet highly contested aspect of performance, and performance has come to be a key concept in many different fields. Notions of presence hinge on the relationship between the live and mediated, on notions of immediacy, authenticity and originality. Debates over the nature of the actor's presence have been at the heart of key aspects of theatre practice and theory since the late 1950s and are a vital part of the discourses surrounding avant-garde and postmodern performance. The advent of new media forms, and the increasing integration of contemporary performance and media, has generated new engagements, practices and understandings of presence in performance. Archaeology is increasingly understood less as the discovery of the past and more in terms of different relationships with what is left of the past. This foregrounds anthropological questions of the performance and construction of the past in memory, narrative, collections (of textual and material sources), archives and systems of documentation, in experiences of place. In Computer Science, "presence" is a key concept and goal in the construction of Virtual Environments: complex interactive projections that simulate three-dimensional environments and which may include representations of humans (avatars). Performing Presence: from the live to the simulated will be an international and interdisciplinary forum for the exploration of how exchanges of practices, concepts and methodologies between art, performance and new media practitioners, between academic disciplines and between live, mediated and simulated performance may deepen an understanding of the performance of presence. CONFIRMED KEYNOTE SPEAKERS*:
Keynote presentations will include papers, performative events, performance, as well as real/second life forums. *Please note all keynotes may be subject to change. CALL FOR PAPERS: The conference will engage with a wide range of disciplines, art and performance practices, technologies of presence, theory and modes and practices of documentation. Key questions may include:
Proposals for presentations of all kinds are welcome: papers, panel proposals, performative events and performances. 250 word proposals, with any relevant technical requirements, should be submitted to the Linda Dowsett, the Conference Administrator, NO LATER THAN 1st DECEMBER 2008. Conference registration opens 1st December 2008 and closes 31st January 2009. Registration fee: £160/£100 (concessions), including all conference events, excluding accommodation. Please follow this link for a conference registration form: http://projects.exeter.ac.uk/performing-presence/conference-registration.php Performing Presence is managed by Nick Kaye and Gabriella Giannachi of the department of Drama at University of Exeter, the archaeologist Michael Shanks at Stanford University, and Mel Slater, Professor of Virtual Environments at University College, London, and is in receipt of substantial funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC). For any enquiries regarding the conference, proposals or registration please contact Linda Dowsett, Performing Presence Conference Administrator, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, UK. E-mail: l.m.dowsett@exeter.ac.uk. Telephone : +44 (0)1392 262332. ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Acknowledgements Performing Presence is supported by
The AHRC funds postgraduate training and research in the arts and humanities, from archaeology and English literature to design and dance. The quality and range of research supported not only provides social and cultural benefits but also contributes to the economic success of the UK. The University of Exeter, The Queen’s Drive, Exeter, Devon, UK EX4 4QJ
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