Alternate Realities
22-30 SEPTEMBER LIGHTHOUSE, BRIGHTON
Exploring the themes of borders, identity, and loss, the works each show how immersive and interactive technologies enable us to interpret and engage with socio-political infrastructures, storytelling and the interface of physical and digital worlds. Each work uses a different technological platform to explore the ideas – gaming, AR, social media and interactive installation.
THE WORKS
Terminal 3 (Augmented Reality)Explore contemporary Muslim identities in the U.S. through the lens of an airport interrogation. Step into the uncanny to directly interrogate, and determine the fate of, the hologram passenger before you.Project Creator: Asad J. MalikProducers: Jill Klekas, Jake Sally, Nigel Tierney, Zeda StoneDuration: 12 min
Belongings (Interactive Installation)For many in the developed world, life can be consumed with material objects. But what if you had to flee your homeland forever? What’s the one item you couldn’t live without? The subjects of this immersive installation were faced with that very decision.Project Creators: John-Paul Marin, Matt Smith, Tea Uglow, Kirstin Sillitoe Producers: Megan Gibbon, Jonathan Richards Duration: 20 min
Where is Home? (Interactive Documentary – Instagram)A journey through West Africa that asks the simple question. What is home? This Instagram-based project reveals a complex range of thought provoking answers, and interrogates people’s understanding and experiences of a fundamental concept that’s often taken for granted.Project Creator and producer: Ifeatu NnaobiDuration: 30 mins
The Loss Levels (Game)A deeply personal yet playful collection of fifteen experimental narrative arcade games that narrate the artist’s experience in 2017 when he lost his brother in the Manchester Arena terror attack.Project Creator and producer: Dan HettDuration: 4 min
Alternate Realities Touring Exhibition 2018 will travel to the Barbican, London (20-27 August), Lighthouse as part of Brighton Digital Festival (22-30 September) and to the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford (5-14 October), in the lead up to and during the Widescreen Weekend. The UK tour is being support ed by Arts Council England as part of Doc/Fest’s newly acquired National Portfolio Organisation funding, and presented in partnership with each of the venues involved.