What is an interactive art?
Interactive art is any type of art that includes the viewer in the creative process. Interactive art attempts to question the traditional border between the artist and the "audience". It can use the physical medium, as in the case of installation art, or it can be purely digital and internet. Interactive art often uses computing power to manage responses to viewers' events.
The art movement in the early 20 years in Europe and North America laid the foundations for the emergence of interactive art. People began to question the role of artists, work and viewer in art. French American artist Marcel Duchamp may have created one of the first examples of interactive art with his 1920 rotary glass plate . Its machine used the engine to spin rectangular pieces of glass, which were painted on them by segments of circles. Looking from a distance of 3.28 feet (1 meter), an optical illusion of full circles was created.
technology usually prominently factor in interactive art. ThatThe work of art was interactive, it must have some way to reduce the action of the viewer. It can be in the form of physical sensors or, in the case of Internet art, computer input device such as a mouse. Work usually must also have a specific way to respond to inputs. Often a large number of results with a large space for spectators' interpretation are possible.
Some works of the installation art are interactive. Interest in the creation of interactive installations increased at the age of 90, when digital technology became advanced enough. Built -in sensors in interactive installation art can respond to the temperature, movement or proximity of the viewer and offer a unique experience. Physical works of interactive installation art are increasingly exhibited in the museum.
Interactive architecture is the idea of a proposed environment that uses some KEVIE to manage physical responses with users.Some foundations for interactive architecture stem from work on cybernetics, a study of regulatory systems in the early 1960s. Digital progress for the following decades has made interactive architecture technologically and economically feasible. Interactive architecture is a new and evolving concept, but shares a lot in common with interactive art.
Video games are interactive applications, but some critics question the suggestion that they form interactive art. Video games often have very little space for users to influence the creative dimensions of the game such as conspiracy. For example, there may be only two possible ending of the game: victory or defeat. In this case, many critics charge that the game is not art because it is not open.