Cretive Industries:
Memory
Stairs:
Defining an Expressive Grammar for Emotionally
Evocative Virtual Environments
Jacki Morie
morie@ict.usc.edu
Jacki Morie has worked in both animation
and visual effects entertainment (Disney, Rhythm & Hues
Studios) as well as with developing virtual environments
in government-sponsored research laboratories. The proposed
'Memory Stairs Project' is an artistic virtual environment
installation embodying the tools and techniques she
plans to develop to create extremely compelling virtual
worlds.
D. W. Griffith, a film pioneer, was among the
first to take 'the movie' from a peculiar invention
to a means of expression in its own right. He invented
the close up, the dissolve, and the concepts of scenes
and edits. We have no equivalent to the scene in virtual
reality; what is a close up in an environment where
the audience can move around of their own volition?
The main question to be answered is 'Does virtual reality
have a unique language?' It is a medium that inherently
presents numerous challenges, beyond the obvious technological
ones. Can we formulate creative and artistic techniques
that will allow more expression and compelling experiences
in this new media? How do we deal with additional sensory
inputs such as smell and touch? How do we deal with
non-linearity and the freedom of choice inherent to
a visitor to such worlds? Where does the concept of
the story fit? How can we provide intense emotional
experiences that will be felt and remembered? The 'Memory
Stairs Project' aims to begin to answer these key questions
by informing the vocabulary and grammar in development. |