Tese
Sob a pele e a roupa: computação vestível como marca de intimidade e memória
Fecha
2019-06-27Autor
Thatiane Mendes Duque
Institución
Resumen
Clothing, like our skin, is our interface to the world. They can receive, store and transmit
meaningful emotions, experiences and productions. We understand the epidermis as being
our first skin, which covers and encompasses our body. Clothing, is our second skin, which
from the earliest times has the function of protecting and decorating. We call Wearable
Computing the third skin technological layer which has been "sewn" in our clothes us. In
1997 Steve Mann coined the term those Wearable Computing, however, this term when
combined with art and fashion seems to request new denominations: electronic textiles,
smart clothes, textile sensor's, technological fashion, among others, that better embrace the
relative characteristics of our clothes. Being malleable, comfortable, flexible, and washable
are peculiarities of clothing. We believe that as portable monitoring technologies show us
data such as heart beats, skin conduction, geolocation, and body movements, temperature,
among others, the intimacy data serves as self-control, surveillance and monitoring, the
standards of beauty and behavior. They are information captured by the contact with the skin
/ tissue, which allows us to monitor/monitor our body 24 hours a day. They create docile
bodies, disciplined and useful for technologies of production of subjectivities. However, art,
as a tool for revealing the surface of what is hidden, has a power to sumon other possibilities
about transport devices, which subvert a notion of an efficient and self-controlled body. We
study and propose the poetics of wearable computing as a way of creating tactics for "unruly
and indubitable bodies". We advocate that obtaining data of the body through computing,
and associated them with other forms of production of memories, such as smartphones,
social networks, among others, are a new form of expression, extension and construction of
subjectivities. Our hypothesis is that such records can function as a form of monitoring and
surveillance as much as to produce innumerable poetic memories which subvert our
perceptions about the body. To investigate this issue we are working with the idea that
technical objects are able to create intimacy journals, which make us question how algorithm
get's body, to do sus job we rela on ideas of Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, among others,
and artists of Steve Mann, Lygia Clark, Orlan, Stelarc and others.