Back It Up: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
(Created page with "{{Graduation work |Creator=Karina Dukalska |Date=2018 |Bio=Karina Dukalska is a graphic designer challenging the physicality of books. The content should not be the only eleme...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 2: Line 2:
|Creator=Karina Dukalska
|Creator=Karina Dukalska
|Date=2018
|Date=2018
|Bio=Karina Dukalska is a graphic designer challenging the physicality of books. The content should not be the only element that causes a book to be engaging. How we interact with a publication creates a deeper experience with the content consumed.
|Bio=Karina Dukalska is a graphic designer challenging the physicality of books by enforcing physical interaction. Engaging with the content through materials, tangibility and actions deepens the experience of consuming the content itself.
|Thumbnail=back it up grad show thumbnail.jpg
|Thumbnail=back it up grad show thumbnail.jpg
|Website=http://www.karinadukalska.com
|Description=The intangibility of social dances create a disruptive beauty of pure fulfilment in the moment, a true sense of flow, as well as a yearning for the fleeting memory that may be lost forever. Back It Up is an interactive performance of two swing dancers whose steps are controlled by the audience. It is accompanied by graphical notation systems, traces of the non-verbal dialogue between dancers and the atmosphere in the room recorded by the audience. The difference in perception of the experience is what makes every recording unique.
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 23:08, 11 June 2018

Back It Up
Creator Karina Dukalska
Year 2018
Bio Karina Dukalska is a graphic designer challenging the physicality of books by enforcing physical interaction. Engaging with the content through materials, tangibility and actions deepens the experience of consuming the content itself.
Thumbnail
Back it up grad show thumbnail.jpg
Website http://www.karinadukalska.com

The intangibility of social dances create a disruptive beauty of pure fulfilment in the moment, a true sense of flow, as well as a yearning for the fleeting memory that may be lost forever. Back It Up is an interactive performance of two swing dancers whose steps are controlled by the audience. It is accompanied by graphical notation systems, traces of the non-verbal dialogue between dancers and the atmosphere in the room recorded by the audience. The difference in perception of the experience is what makes every recording unique.