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- Fall 2024
- Featured Alumnus: Emma Jean is building a career in journalism and a network of FCAT alumni
- 間眅埶AV Publishing Director Hannah McGregor's new book explores everyone's favourite dinosaur movie and what it means to be angry, monstrous, and free
- Scholarly Impact of the Week: Handbook explores essential role of ethnic media
- Summer 2024
- New book edited by SIAT Senior Lecturer Michael Filimowicz offers a comprehensive overview of sound design
- New Certificate in Sound offers interdisciplinary perspectives
- FCAT & SIAT partner with two BC school districts to bring new learning opportunities to indigenous students
- Lita Lising and Kiran Sonea are the inaugural recipients of the Shaun Kenneth Gauthier Memorial Award
- Communication alumnus and renowned acoustic ecologist Hildegard Westerkamp receives honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts from 間眅埶AV
- New award nurtures artists to push creative limits
- SCA's Laura U. Marks Receives Guggenheim Fellowship
- Spring 2024
- Congratulations to the 2023/2024 major graduate award recipients from FCAT
- "The Fold", a new book from the SCA's Laura U. Marks offers a philosophy for living in an infinitely connected cosmos
- IUPP student Morgan Peequaquat finds her voice and a community while organizing the Skoden Indigenous Film Festival
- 間眅埶AV Publishing Director Hannah McGregor's new book asks "Can podcasting save academia?"
- Scholarly Impact of the Week: Understanding Authenticity Age Information Disorder
- Meet Sorren Jao, 2023 Lighthouse Lab Prize Recipient
- FCAT scholars awarded Community Engagement Initiative grants for their innovative work
- Going beyond diversity and inclusion: A Day with Dr. Kim TallBear
- Scholarly Impact of the Week: Hopeful Monster, an Imaginative, Innovative Soundscape
- Fall 2023
- Summer 2023
- SCA's Arne Eigenfeldt in The Conversation: Why the growth of AI in making art wont eliminate artists
- FCAT hosts Safe Space for White Questions online discussion
- Our Way and The Klabona Keepers among 5th Annual Skoden Film Festival award winners
- FCAT supports northern BC communities with increased learning opportunities
- Master of Digital Media Grads Tackle Plastic Waste Blanketing Our Oceans with Group Shopping App
- June 2023 Convocation Featured Student Profiles
- Introducing FCAT Research Spotlight
- The School of Communication's 50th Anniversary: From 1973 to 2023
- Spring 2023
- Cody Sawatsky Memorial Plaque Unveiled at the 間眅埶AV Surrey Campus
- Scholarly Impact of the Week: Michael Filimowicz
- School of Interactive Arts & Technology professor Wolfgang Stuerzlinger inducted to prestigious VR academy
- Meet Nico Hernandez, 2022 Lighthouse Lab Prize Recipient
- Jon Corbett Joins School of Interactive Art and Technology
- Welcome Kota Ezawa, the 2023 Spring Audain Visual Artist in Residence
- MPUB Alumnus Claire Cavanagh Becomes Literary Agent
- Alumnus designs Canucks Lunar New Year jersey
- 2023 Skoden Indigenous Film Festival
- How the Online Streaming Act will support Canadian content
- Meet Jonathan Newman, the 2022 Recipient of the Cody Sawatsky Memorial Award in Gaming
- Fall 2022
- Eight 間眅埶AV innovators bestowed with Canadas highest academic honour
- SIAT Convocation Features October 2022
- Graduating Student Sharlyn Monillas Tells Us About Her Time in CMNS
- Centre for Digital Media partners with Eth廙s Lab to improve Black representation in digital media
- Explore the Surrey Community Open House SIAT Project Demos
- new interdisciplinary technology aid wilderness search and rescue
- Building better democracies through journalism
- Charter alumnus making a big impact through small gifts
- Summer 2022
- FCAT June 2022 Convocation: Looking back
- Meet Contemporary Arts alum Krystle Silverfox
- 間眅埶AV researchers receive over $6 million to tackle online disinformation, foster data fluencies
- SIAT researchers develop and curate exhibition at Galiano Islands Yellowhouse Art Centre
- Roll out the red carpet: Surrey students showcase filmmaking talent
- Spring 2022
- FACTS AND FALSEHOODS IN THE TIME OF COVID-19
- Celebrating Black History Month across the Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology
- 間眅埶AV professor shares experience living and teaching in war-torn Ukraine
- 間眅埶AV artists and researchers showcase art installation on Surreys UrbanScreen
- Leadership and Agile Production Management micro-credential established in partnership with DigiBC
- Leading with heart: Meet Staff Achievement Award winner Corbin Saleken
- HOW GOOGLES SEARCH ENGINE SUPPORTS CONSPIRACY THEORISTS AND HATE FIGURES
- 間眅埶AV staffers commitment to local arts community nets staff achievement award
- Fall 2021
- Fall 2021 Convocation: Looking back
- TikTok/Instagram video contest
- Meet communication undergraduate student Ashran Bharosha
- FCAT Pro Workshop: Professionally Brand Yourself & Create a Digital Portfolio!
- 間眅埶AV establishes first interdisciplinary and practice-based PhD in contemporary arts in Western Canada
- To design a more ethical app, consider youth well-being
- Peter Anderson: Fighting fires with better emergency communication
- FCAT Alumni Excellence Award winners reflect on their awards and their time in their programs
- This season, give the gift of tech literacy not addiction along with that device
- Study identifies link between certain lifestyle activities and reduced cognitive decline
- Summer 2021
- 間眅埶AV Publishing Launches the Greg Younging Publishing Award Endowment
- Resources and readings to start National Indigenous History Month
- Celebrating Indigenous history and culture during National Indigenous History Month
- Communication honours student studies online conspiracy theories, disinformation
- Making the world a better place: criminology alumnus turned interdisciplinary artist continues academic journey
- FCAT June 2021 Convocation: Looking back
- An invisible polluter: 間眅埶AV researchers investigate the growing carbon footprint of streaming media
- Low res, high impact: Small File Media Festival raises awareness of the carbon footprint of online streaming
- Welcoming Canada HomeShare to Metro Vancouver
- FCAT faculty members receive tri-council grants to support their research
- Spring 2021
- Winners of the FCAT Student Photo Contest Spring 2021
- Alex Krilow receives first Greg Younging Undergraduate Award in Publishing
- FCAT Student Photo Contest Spring 2021
- Skoden Indigenous Film Festival co-founder and SCA alumnus returns to teach Skoden course
- Communication professor Martin Laba shares what he's learning about remote teaching
- In the rush for coronavirus information, unreviewed scientific papers are being publicized
- Film alumnus Kelvin Redvers receives Governor Generals Meritorious Service Medal
- Fall 2024
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- FCAT Convocation Celebration October 2024
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- FCAT Podcasts
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- Season One
- Episode 0: Welcome to After School
- Episode 1: Finding Your Creative Potential with Prem Gill
- Episode 2: Inclusivity in the Performance Arts with Aryo Khakpour
- Episode 3: Connecting Design and Technology with Sofia Bautista
- Episode 4: Storytelling in Game Design with Mars Balisacan
- Episode 5: Challenging the Status Quo through Art with Shion Skye Carter & Stefan Nazarevich
- Episode 6: Starting Your Own Publishing Company with Jesse Finkelstein
- Episode 7: Finding Happiness in Your Work with Nick Doering
- Episode 8: Making a Name in Independent Filmmaking with Gloria Mercer
- Episode 9: It All Starts with a Strategy with Adam Brayford
- Episode 10: Shifting Places, Shifting Minds with Milton Lim
- Episode 11: Being the Big Piece in a Small Pie with Jordan Yep
- Episode 12: Reimagining Dance Training with Tin Gamboa
- Episode 13: Standing Out as a Creative with Sara Milosavic
- Episode 15: Kristin Richter
- Season Two
- Episode 0: Welcome to FCAT After School Series 2!
- Episode 1: Entrepreneurship in UX Design with Eric Lee
- Episode 2: Community and Adaptability in the Performing Arts with Howard Dai
- Episode 3: Mastering the Art of Publishing with Jazmin Welch
- Episode 4: Navigating your Educational Journey with Broadcaster Simi Sara
- Episode 5: Career Transitions of a Software Engineer with Vic Ong
- Episode 6: Becoming Your Own Boss with Kirstin Richter
- Episode 7: Gaining a Global Outlook with Kai Bockmann
- Episode 8: Finding Your Place in Publishing with Heidi Waechtler
- Episode 9: Exploring Virtual Production with Brenda Medina
- Episode 10: Inclusion in the Design Industry with Priscilla Skylar Lee
- Episode 11: Exploring Study Focus in Contemporary Arts with Sophie Tang
- Season Three
- Episode 0: Season 3 Coming Soon!
- Episode 1: Following Your Creative Passions with Cameron Maitland
- Episode 2: Shame Demons and Queer Sci-fi Horror with Mily Mumford
- Episode 3: The Poetry of Publishing with Charlotte Nip
- Episode 4: Clowning, Failing, and Re-enchanting the Everyday with June Fukumura
- Episode 5: Tech, Meditation, and Leaving a Legacy with Jay Vidyarthi
- Episode 6: Your Work Is Not Your Life with Valentina Fort矇-Hernandez
- Episode 7: Trying Everything Once and the Future of Media with Jason DSouza
- Episode 8: Decolonizing and Doing What You Have Always Done with Audrey Heath
- Episode Transcripts
- Season 3, Episode 7: Trying Everything Once and the Future of Media with Jason DSouza
- Season 3, Episode 6: Your Work Is Not Your Life with Valentina Fort矇-Hernandez
- Season 3, Episode 5: Tech, Meditation, and Leaving a Legacy with Jay Vidyarthi
- Season 3, Episode 4: Clowning, Failing, and Re-enchanting the Everyday with June Fukumura
- Season 3, Episode 3: The Poetry of Publishing with Charlotte Nip
- Season 3, Episode 2: Shame Demons and Queer Sci-fi Horror with Mily Mumford
- Season 3, Episode 1: Following Your Creative Passions with Cameron Maitland
- Season 2, Episode 11: Exploring Study Focus in Contemporary Arts with Sophie Tang
- Season 2, Episode 10: Inclusion in the Design Industry with Priscilla Skylar Lee
- Season 2, Episode 9: Exploring Virtual Production with Brenda Medina
- Season 2, Episode 8: Finding Your Place in Publishing with Heidi Waechtler
- Season 2, Episode 7: Kai Bockmann
- Season 2, Episode 6: Becoming Your Own Boss with Kirstin Richter
- Season 2, Episode 5: Career Transitions of a Software Engineer with Vic Ong
- Season 2, Episode 4: Navigating your Educational Journey with Broadcaster Simi Sara
- Season 2, Episode 3: Mastering the Art of Publishing with Jazmin Welch
- Season 2, Episode 2: Community and Adaptability in the Performing Arts with Howard Dai
- Season 2, Episode 1: Entrepreneurship in UX Design with Eric Lee
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FCAT Research and Teaching Forum 2022
The FCAT 2022 Research and Teaching Forum brings together all members of FCAT research and teaching faculty. The principal goal of this event is to allow FCAT research and teaching faculty to spend time together and learn from each other. The Forum provides a multidisciplinary platform to promote, present and discuss your work with your colleagues.
Short 10-minute presentations will be delivered in person and further broadcasted as video recordings to inform current and prospective students, and the broader community.
Forum Details
- Date: Thursday, May 12th, 2022
- Time: 4:00pm - 8:00pm
- Location: Djavad Mowafaghian World Art Centre, 間眅埶AV Goldcorp Centre for the Arts
FCAT Research and Teaching Forum Program
4:45 PM First Session: Hannah McGregor, Amplify Podcast Network
Hannah McGregor Amplify Podcast Network |
Bio: Hannah McGregor is an Assistant Professor of Publishing whose teaching and research focus on the intersections of publishing and social change. Abstract: The Amplify Podcast Network is a collaborative project seeking to develop the infrastructure to support podcasts as a form of scholarly communication. In collaboration with Wilfrid Laurier University Press, we're developing editorial and production best practices for peer reviewing and publishing scholarly podcasts; we're also working with 間眅埶AV's DHIL to develop a tool for the long-term preservation of scholarly podcasts. This presentation will introduce the work of the Amplify Podcast Network and argue for podcasting as a form of scholarly communication that not only expands the audience for scholarly work but also has the potential to transform academic knowledge creation. |
5:00 PM First Session: Miwa Matreyek, Embodied representations of a changing world
Miwa Matreyek Embodied representations of a changing world |
Bio: Miwa Matreyek is an animator, designer, and performer based in Los Angeles. Coming from a background in animation, Matreyek creates live, interdisciplinary performances where she interacts with her animations as a shadow silhouette, at the intersection of cinematic and theatrical, fantastical and physical, and the hand-made and digital. Her work exists in a dreamlike visual space that makes invisible worlds visible, often weaving surreal and poetic narratives of conflict between humanity and nature as embodied performed experinces. She has presented her work all around the world, including animation/film festivals, theater/performance festivals, art museums, science museums, tech conferences, and universities. Abstract: Miwa Matreyek will discuss her latest piece, Infinitely Yours, along with her insights about storytelling, working in her interdisciplinary method of combining animation and live performance and the power of shadow. Her work often deals with themes of humanity at odds with nature, creation and destruction, and stories told from shifting perspectives. |
5:15 PM FIRST SESSION: Jim Bizzocchi, A Tripod has Three Legs: Reflections on Research, Art, and Teaching
Bio: Jim Bizzocchi is Professor Emeritus in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology. Jim's research interests include the evolving aesthetics of the digital moving image, the creation of generative video-sequencing systems, and the design of interactive narrative. He has published in a wide variety of academic conferences, journals and book chapters. Jim is a recipient of 間眅埶AVs Excellence in Teaching Award. He is a practicing video artist, producing both linear and computationally-generative video art works that complement his scholarly writing. His video art has been shown extensively in a number of festivals, galleries, and juried exhibitions throughout the world. Jim can often be found ski-touring or hiking in BCs Coastal Mountains.
Abstract: Research, Art, and Teaching can inform and support each other. At 間眅埶AV, and especially in SIAT and FCAT, artistic practice is seen as a legitimate research activity. Certainly in my own work, my research and my artwork have significant conceptual and practical overlap. I am fortunate that my teaching assignments and experiences have formed a third leg of support for my professional practice. In the formal context of 間眅埶AV policies/procedures, research and artistic practice are the most directly connected of the three legs. The SIAT Tenure and Promotion criteria recognize this explicitly, using concepts and language my School initially borrowed from the SCA Tenure and Promotion guidelines. My own practice while at 間眅埶AV has benefited directly from this formal connection of Research and Art. Some of this takes the form of career benefit my artistic practice has been recognized as a research activity. This has been the case from the time of my initial hire through all the subsequent stages of tenure and promotion, including my final promotion to Emeritus Professor. More significantly, my everyday practices of scholarly discourse and of artistic creation have informed and supported each other throughout my 間眅埶AV career. Teaching is the third leg of this triangle. Ive been lucky to have teaching assignments in the same domains in which I practice my research and art: moving image production, game design, digital media poetics, and narrative across media. This means my course design and my day-to-day teaching have been supported by both my scholarship and my art creation. At the same time, the things I have learned from my teaching practice and from my students have provided insight and depth to both of my other practices.
5:45 PM Second session: Wolfgang Stuerzlinger, Better User Interfaces for Occasionally Failing Technologies
Bio: Building on his deep expertise in Virtual Reality and Human-Computer Interaction, Dr. Stuerzlinger is a leading researcher in Three-dimensional User Interfaces. He got his Doctorate from the Vienna University of Technology, was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Chapel Hill in North Carolina, and professor at York University in Toronto. Since 2014, he is a full professor at the School of Interactive Arts + Technology at 間眅埶AV in Vancouver, Canada. His work aims to gain a deeper understanding of and to find innovative solutions for real-world problems. Current research projects include better 3D interaction techniques for Virtual and Augmented Reality applications, new human-in-the-loop systems for big data analysis (Visual Analytics and Immersive Analytics), the characterization of the effects of technology limitations on human performance, investigations of human behaviors with occasionally failing technologies, user interfaces for versions, scenarios, and alternatives, and new Virtual/Augmented Reality hardware and software.
Abstract: Technology increasingly employs unreliable systems as a central means to interpret input. Common examples include text input in mobile devices or lane departure detection in cars. This reliance exposes a fundamental problem people do not generally understand the underlying systems, and seemingly small system or human errors can lead to potentially disastrous consequences. While technical improvements partially address this, recent research in my group pursues a complementary approach through a better understanding of human interaction with, and new user interface (UI) technologies for, unreliable systems. I present insights gathered from our analysis of human behaviours around occasionally failing systems, new methods that reduce errors caused by auto-correction and prediction algorithms, and close with an outlook for future work.
6:00 PM Second session: William Odom, Developing a Theory and Practice of Slow Technology through Design
Bio: William Odom is an Assistant Professor in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at 間眅埶AV in Vancouver, Canada. He leads a range of projects in exploring longer-term human-data relations, slow interaction design, and methods for developing the practice of Research-through-Design. He was previously a Fulbright Scholar in Australia, a Banting Fellow in Canada, and a Design United Research Fellow in the Netherlands.
Abstract: The convergence of social, cloud and mobile computing has created a world in which people generate, access, manipulate, and share personal digital data at larger scales and faster rates than ever before. From digital photo albums to online music streaming services, these new technologies have enabled people to create vast archives of digital data that capture their life experiences. These technological trends raise complex questions for the design community as we critically look to the future and consider their longer-term implications. As archives continue to grow, how will people live with their personal data in ways that support their evolving practices and understandings of self as they change over time? What kinds of qualities should designers consider in crafting a longer-term place for computational things in everyday life? Early research has begun to show that designing technologies that intentionally slow down interactions with digital artifacts can make them more valuable parts of everyday life. However, the conceptualization of slowness as a design approach is underdeveloped and exemplars of how it can be translated into design strategies are sparse. Research through Design (RtD) is an emerging research method in interaction design that grounds theoretical investigations through the researchcreation activity of design. The design artifacts produced through RtD offer exemplars of how theoretical concepts can be articulated and refined through the creative practice of design. In this way, RtD offers concrete ways to surface new knowledge on how complex social issues like digital overload can be reframed and approached. Over the past several years, I have investigated how the slow technology design philosophy might offer a critical framing for inquiring into the research questions posed above and how slow technology itself could be further theoretically developed. In this talk I will draw on examples from this trajectory of work to describe how theoretical ideas of slowness were advanced through practice.
6:15 PM Second session: Katherine Reilly, Is datafication a universal process?
Bio: Katherine Reilly is an Associate Professor in the School of Communication. She works closely with community partners in Latin America to do community engaged research on data, information systems, and social change. Abstract: Data science and critical scholars alike rely on the term 'datafication' to describe the reorganization of social processes around personal data. But these processes are often assumed to be universal and hegemonic. This talk draws on findings from a citizen data literacy project in Peru to reveal the complexities and nuances of datafication in historical context, and to raise questions about its role in social change. |
6:45 PM THIRD SESSION: John Maxwell, Pop! A Rapidly Evolving Research Prototype
Bio: John Maxwell is Associate Prof & Director of the Publishing Studies at 間眅埶AV. His research has focused on the cultural trajectory of personal and educational computing, the history of publication technologies, digital genres, and the evolution of scholarly communications.
Abstract: Just before the pandemic began we announced the launch of *Pop! Public. Open. Participatory,* a "post-digital journal of the public humanities." Pop! would be an open-access, online journal with a beautifully designed print edition, circulated at conferences and events to drive readership and engagement among humanities scholars and beyond. The pandemic squashed live events and by extension our circulation plan too, but it evolved into a prototype MVP for a scholar-led OA journal: produced on simplest-possible tech to explore what is truly essential in an OA journal. In 2022, Pop! is now exploring becoming an 'overlay journal' for the Canadian HSS Commons project, moving towards an alternative model for peer-review, credentialing, and readership in a 'disciplinary commons' space. Pop!'s agility has been a function of its small scale, minimal funding requirements, and mission-driven ethic.
7:00 PM THIRD SESSION: Rob Kitsos, Mapping/Making/ Moving Matter
Bio: Rob Kitsos is an interdisciplinary dance artist with an international profile focusing on collaboration and performance. As a professor of dance in the School for the Contemporary Arts, a consistent part of his work has been designing courses that bring together dance, theatre, music, visual art, and design -testing new approaches and established methods for communicating and cocreating between performing arts disciplines. As a maker, Kitsos has created over 100 original performance works at international festivals in the United States, Canada, Lisbon, Barcelona, France, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Netherlands, Venezuela and Hong Kong. Rob lives and works on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. Robkitsos.com
Abstract: Exploring movement through disciplines outside of dance, Kitsos will share teaching and research projects including a database of tools for collaboration, score-based performance research and a new direction in approaches to movement creation through a material-led practice.
7:15 PM THIRD SESSION: Gillian Russell, Imaginative Methods: Designing Tools for a Critical Imaginary
Bio: Gillian Russell is an Assistant Professor in design at 間眅埶AVs School of Interactive Arts and Technology, Vancouver, Canada. Working at the intersection of critical design, anthropological futures, and narrative environments, her practice explores how design can be used as a method for exposing the entangled complexity of technology, culture and environment, and open up space for new pathways towards more socially just and sustainable futures. Dr. Russell is co-director of the Imaginative Methods Lab, a research and teaching platform dedicated to developing practices and tools to re-imagine the rights to research and design.
Abstract: This talk will present our work in the Imaginative Methods Lab (間眅埶AV) through a close reading of a recent project we did for the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (MAAT), Lisbon Portugal. Titled, Disturbing Conservation: Remapping the Avencas MPA, the work combined tactics of critical design with elements of new materialist methodologies and practice-based research to develop methods to imagine with people as a means to collectively (re)think the present, apprehend the unknown, and intervene in the world.