Eric Joris
Eric Joris | |
---|---|
Born | 1955 |
Nationality | Belgian |
Eric Joris (born 1955 in Antwerp, Belgium) is a Belgian multidisciplinary artist and stage director. In 1991 he founded CREW Eric Joris.
He is a multimedia artist with an initial education in filmmaking, covering many areas such as industrial design, graphic design, comics, visual arts, installation art and last but not least performance art. Under his direction CREW Eric Joris adamantly tries to make performances at the melting point between live art and digital media. Eric Joris has studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Antwerp) (BE) and the Brussels RITS Institute for Media and Film, languages, art history and economy at Sorbonne, (Paris), Cambridge University (United Kingdom), Heidelberg (Collegium Palatinum) and Tokyo (ETP fundings by European Government).[1]
Eric Joris develops intriguing methods for connecting state-of-the-art technology with artistic forms, often exploring and questioning the human senses, particularly our perception of sound, movement and space particularly. His company CREW Eric Joris generates live-art projects that can be described as immersive theatre, yet those projects move and shapeshift continuously, always operating on the borders between art and science, or beyond the limit of either.[2]
The works of Eric Joris are frequently co-produced and/or sponsored by pioneering institutes for technology, such as Fraunhofer Society and Max Planck Society. He has received eminent prizes and fellowships from the French and Flemish government, as well as from various foundations. CREW Eric Joris is participating in the prestigious program 2020 3D Media, which has secured the backing of the European Commission. CREW is also artistic partner in the EU-funded multidisciplinary research consortium Dreamspace, which develops tools that enable creative professionals to combine live performances, video and computer generated imagery in real time.[3]
He is a mentor of the Forecast Platform 2015-2016, an international platform that promotes emerging talents.
Eric Joris currently lives in Antwerp and works in Brussels.
Productions
- Collateral Rooms, 2016
- C.a.p.e. Drop_Dog , 2016
- Absence, 2015 (Eric Joris and Peter Verhelst), production by CREW Eric Joris and NTGent
- EXPLORER/Prometheus Unchained, 2015 (Eric Joris and Urland), production by CREW Eric Joris and Productiehuis Rotterdam
- C.a.p.e. Anima, 2014 (creation by CREW and Anima Eterna Brugge), conducted by Jos van Immerseel, commissioned by Concertgebouw Brugge
- Centrifuga, 2013
- C.a.p.e. Vooruit/STAM, 2013
- aXes, 2013
- C.a.p.e. KIT, 2013 (Eric Joris and Chantalla Pleiter)
- C.a.p.e. Tohoku, 2012
- NoHorizon, 2012
- C.a.p.e. Pierrefonds, 2010
- BOLSCAN, 2010
- Line-Up, 2009
- EUX, 2009
- W(Double U), 2008
- O_Rex,1.3., 2008
- U_Ranging Standstill, 2006
- Crash, 2004
- Philoctetes, 2002
- Icarus, 2001
- N.M., 2001
- Kammerspiel, 1999
- Kaufhaus Inferno, 1999
References
- ^ "CREW". CREW. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- ^ "Forecast 2015". Forecast Platform. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
- ^ "Forecast 2015". Forecast Platform. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
Further Reading
- Maaike Bleeker, Jon Foley Sherman, Eirini Nedelkopolou (editors).Performance and phenomenology. Traditions and Transformations, Routledge, 2015. ISBN 978-1-13-880551-4
- Eric Joris (propos recueilli et trasncrit par Mireille Losco-Lena et Izabella Pluta).LIVE ARTS, LIVE MEDIA, recherche scientifique versus recherche artistique dans le travail de la compagnie CREW (performance company), "Ligeia", 2015
- Eirini Nedelkopoulou, Mary Oliver.Editorial, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 10:2, 125-129, DOI:10.1080/14794713.2014.946265, ISSN 1479-4713 (Print).
- Catherine Bouko.Interactivity and immersion in a media-based performance, Participations Journal of audience and reception studies, Volume 11, Issue 1.
- Bleumers, L., Van den Broeck, W., Lievens, B., and Pierson, J."Extending the field of view: a human-centred design perspective on 360°TV", Behaviour & Information Technology, 33(8), 800-814, 2014.
- Nele Wijnants.De binnenkant van het beeld: een kunsthistorisch onderzoek naar immersie, theatraliteit en ervaring, Antwerp, Universiteit Antwerpen, Faculteit Letteren & Wijsbegeerte, 2013
- Decock, J., Van Looy, J., Bleumers, L., Bekaert, P.The Pleasure of Being (There?):An Exlorative Study into the Effects of Presence and Identification on the Enjoyment of an Interactive Theatrical Performance using Omni-Directional Video, AI & Society, 2013.
- Bleumers, L., Lievens, B., Pierson, J."From Sensory Dream to Television Format: Gathering User Feedback on the Use and Experience of Omnidirectional Video-based Solutions", Proceedings of the International Society for Presence Research Annual Conference, Edinburgh, Scotland: Edinburgh Napier University, 2011.
- Sigrid Merx. From doing to performing phenomenology: implications and possibilities, in: Foundations of Science, Vol.16.3, 2011
- Vanhoutte, Kurt. Wijnants, Nele. Performing phenomenology: negotiating presence in intermedial theatre, in: Foundation of Science, ISSN 1233-1821 - 16:2-3, pp. 275–284, 2011.
- Klich, R and Scheer, E. Multimedia Performance. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2011.
- Catherine, Bouko and Natacha, Slater.Identity, Otherness and the virtual double, Technoetic Arts: a journal of speculative research, Vol.9., N°1, pp. 17–30,2011.
- Vanhoutte, Kurt.Two-fold origin: performing hybrids between theatre and media. Contemporary theatre review, ISSN 1048-6801 -20:4, pp. 475–485, 2010.
- Vanhoutte, Kurt. Wijnants, Nele.Instance: the work of CREW with Eric Joris Mapping intermediality in performance/Bay-Cheng, Sarah/edit., Amsterdam, 2010, pp. 69–75, ISBN 978-90-8964-255-4.
- Vanhoutte, Kurt. Wijnants, Nele.Pending Presence: negotiating the space inbetween Space cowboys: how art creates, networks and visualises hybrid spaces, Genk, Media and Design Academy, pp. 58–72, 2009.
Sources
- Feherova, Daria (November 17, 2007). "How to be in, not out" (PDF). Spielart. Mobile Lab for Theatre Art.
- Nelson, Robin. "CREW's Terra Nova: experiencing modes of immersion in actual-virtual space" (PDF). Brunel University London. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- The Foundry (30 June 2015). "Report on DREAMSPACE workshop" (PDF). Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Bouko, Catherine (May 2014). "Interactivity and immersion in a media-based performance" (PDF). Participations: Journal of Audience & Reception Studies. 11 (4).
- Bekaert, Philippe; Vanhoutte, Kurt; Joris, Eric (2007-04-26). Immersive image technology as a strategy of performativity. 23rd Spring Conference on Computer Graphics. ACM. doi:10.1145/2614348.2614352.
- Decock, Jan; Van Looy, Jan; Bleumers, Lizzy; Bekaert, Philippe. The Pleasure of Being (There?). An Explorative Study into the Effects of Presence and Identification on the Enjoyment of an Interactive Theatrical Performance using Omni- Directional Video (PDF). ISPR 2011. The International Society for Presence Research.
- "Eric Joris — V2_Institute for the Unstable Media". V2.nl. 2009-04-15. Retrieved 2015-07-24.
- Nordhjem, Barbara (January 2013). "Penetrating Deeper Into the Temporal Lobe" (PDF). Barbara Nordhjem. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- Bailey, Pippa (17 November 2007). "O. Rex: review" (PDF). Spielart.
- Nechvatal, Joseph (1999). Immersive Ideals / Critical Distances: A Study of the Affinity Between Artistic Ideologies Based in Virtual Reality and Previous Immersive Idioms (PDF) (Ph.D.). University of Wales College. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- "Crew: Immersive Media" (PDF). SIGN+. October 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.
- "Crew" (PDF). Flanders Art Institute. May 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.