record

Thesis Info

LABS ID
00672
Thesis Title
Machines for Living
Author
Robert Twomey
2nd Author
3rd Author
Degree
Ph.D.
Year
2018
Number of Pages
126
University
University of Washington
Thesis Supervisor
Juan Pampin
Supervisor e-mail
pampin AT uw.edu
Other Supervisor(s)
Richard Karpen, Afroditi Psarra
Language(s) of Thesis
English
Department / Discipline
Digital Arts and Experimental Media
Languages Familiar to Author
English
URL where full thesis can be found
hdl.handle.net/1773/41712
Keywords
smart home, le corbusier, bachelard, systems art, site specificity
Abstract: 200-500 words
This thesis describes A Machine for Living In, a digital media artwork using newly available computational and sensing tools to study the home as a site of intimate life. The title invokes Le Corbusier's modernist framing of the house as a machine to interpret the promise of contemporary smart home technologies. The project has two distinct phases: the construction and inhabitation of a functional smart home system, followed by an exhibition of processed data as a multi-part digital art installation. In a process of joint human-machine authorship, this system produces a complex portrait of the home: as a space of language, intimacy, bodily practice, and quotidian narrative. Compositionally, it contrasts utopian illusions of beautiful, frictionless utility with artistic strategies generating insight into the messy, material realities of the everyday. The thesis begins with three key frames of reference for the work in Bachelard's topoanalysis, critical engineering design, and site-specific and systems-oriented arts production. It describes early projects pursing the psychological study of intimate life, leading to the current work. It recounts the conceptual and technical development of A Machine for Living In, and discusses the composition of the resulting exhibition. The thesis concludes with a speculative framing of this research as a kind of introspective design: a hybrid practice of targeted inquiry to provide insight about both human and machine.