9th January 2014, 12:07 PM
And The Reviews Are In: Evaluating Digital Dwelling...
http://digitaldirtvirtualpasts.wordpress...-dwelling/
As a taster:
Remember the film? no! For shame. I love it and the way it confronts you and forces a physical engagement with Skara Brae that goes beyond a pretty watercolour of nice neat people in a nice neat house.
So perhaps watch the film first... then read their own review of the review...
A lot to take in and learn from this. !
[video=vimeo;66396373]http://vimeo.com/66396373[/video]
http://digitaldirtvirtualpasts.wordpress...-dwelling/
As a taster:
Quote:Feedback for the film and exhibition overall was hugely positive but of course, this isnât the Time Out or Rotten Tomatoes film review and though positive feedback is fantastic to see for any project, it all boils down to research in the end. So from a research perspective hearing from people who really didnât like the film was in most cases tremendously useful, even if they didnât realise it when they wrote it! Negative feedback ranged anywhere from constructive criticism to being unapologetically mean. And then there were the few that mistook the comments box on the feedback form for some kind of visitor book. Well, at least Denmark liked it.
Some of the most interesting comments furiously insisted that this simply was not what the past was like, that people in the Neolithic were just like us and that the film rather than simply not being to their taste was unquestionably wrong. Collectively, comments indicated that a large proportion of people approach an interpretive visualisation with some level of preconceived expectation over what an archaeological reconstruction or visualisation should do and how it should be represented. In most cases this general public preconception seems to pertain to an archaeological reconstruction representing the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And I can say with all certainty â in no archaeological re-constructive situation is this ever completely possible! The issue with an attitude which expects an explanation as opposed to an interpretation is that it places all interpretive responsibility on the visualisation itself, excusing an audience of any need for critical awareness when consuming these images.
Remember the film? no! For shame. I love it and the way it confronts you and forces a physical engagement with Skara Brae that goes beyond a pretty watercolour of nice neat people in a nice neat house.
So perhaps watch the film first... then read their own review of the review...
A lot to take in and learn from this. !
[video=vimeo;66396373]http://vimeo.com/66396373[/video]