STUDIO FOR NARRATIVE SPACES

Project

Becoming My Own Audience

Summary

The use of motion capture in live dance performances has created an emerging discipline enabling dancers to play different avatars on the digital stage. Unlike classical workflows, avatars enable performers to act as different characters in customized narratives, but research has yet to address how movement, improvisation, and perception change when dancers act as avatars. We created five avatars representing differing genders, shapes, and body limitations, and invited 15 dancers to improvise with each in practice and performance settings. Results show that dancers used avatars to distance themselves from their own habitual movements, exploring new ways of moving through differing physical constraints. Dancers explored using gender-stereotyped movements like powerful or feminine actions, experimenting with gender identity. However, focusing on avatars can coincide with a lack of continuity in improvisation. This work shows how emerging practices with performance technology enable dancers to improvise with new constraints, stepping outside the classical stage.

Collaborators in the project: Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, Center for Applied Computing and Interactive Media, Perception Neuron.

Publication: Proceedings of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI'25).

People

RAY LC, Grace Fan Zhang, Lareina Molin Li, Kexue Fu, Xiaoyu Chang, Richard Allen

Tech

installation, hci, performance, vr ar, video

Venues

Hong Kong Research Grants Council Theme-based Research Scheme, General Research Fund, CHI

Year

2025