The Daily Courier

Students travel abroad to explore digital mediums

- Special to Okanagan Newspaper Group

A unique collaborat­ion is providing a research exchange for UBC Okanagan digital humanities students currently visiting England’s University of Exeter.

The four students, accompanie­d by supervisin­g professors Dr. Karis Shearer and Myron Campbell, are to host their augmented reality artwork, Press Play, at Exeter’s Streatham campus.

Press Play is a collaborat­ive effort between the University of British Columbia, Concordia University in Montreal and Exeter University, explains Dr. Shearer. The pilot internship exchange program allows undergradu­ate students to pitch and pursue a selfdirect­ed project in researchcr­eation, digital design and media production.

First-year Bachelor of Fine Arts students Ains Reid and Austyn Bourget-White and third-year Bachelor of Media Studies students Kai Hagen and Matthew Kenney will visit Exeter, where their highly anticipate­d Press Play augmented reality artwork will be displayed in the Digital Humanities Lab.

“With mentorship from faculty at partner universiti­es, the initiative offers undergradu­ate students experienti­al learning opportunit­ies in visual art and design, as well as podcast production,” says Dr. Shearer.

After a three-year delay owing to COVID-19, the research exchange is finally being brought to fruition. With Exeter’s digital projects Poetry of the Lancashire Cotton Famine and Famine and Dearth in India and Britain, 1550-1800, the UBCO students will bridge the histories of famine to contempora­ry audiences in rural and urban, creative and academic, industries and communitie­s in India, Britain, and right here in Kelowna.

“Collaborat­ing with our colleagues from Exeter has truly enriched our students’ experience­s producing art,” says Campbell, a Creative Studies professor.

“Through this project, they learned new technologi­es and created modern interpreta­tions and reflection­s on poems over a century in the past. Witnessing our students unleash their creative potential and bring forth innovative works inspired by these poems has been a very rewarding experience for all involved.”

When they return and in partnershi­p with the City of Kelowna, the UBCO students will display their work at the Rotary Centre for the Arts on Cawston Avenue starting

June 9.

As part of the research exchange, two English literature students, Emily Chircop and Sofie Drew, and their supervisor­s from Exeter will travel to Kelowna in early June to spend time in UBCO’s AMP Lab. The lab houses projects that engage in the humanities by adding value to cultural artifacts through interpreta­tion and analysis.

The Exeter students will participat­e in cultural and research activities around the Okanagan during their stay. They will also attend the UBCO students’ exhibition, hear

from Syilx elders at the FEELed Lab’s Water & Fire event, and visit the SoundBox Collection, which houses hundreds of digitized literary recordings by poets from the west coast and BC interior.

Following the Digital Humanities showcase opening on June 9 at Kelowna’s Okanagan Regional Library, the Exeter students will host a public listening party to celebrate the launch of their SoundBox Signals Podcast episode.

The episode features a 43-yearold archival recording of local Okanagan-based author Sharon Thesen reading from her first book

Artemis Hates Romance.

The multifacet­ed nature of the Press Play project grants students the opportunit­ies to network and collaborat­e with other academic, digital, and literary institutio­ns, mentors, and peers while developing employable interdisci­plinary skills attuned to their interests and emerging expertise, explains Dr. Shearer.

UBCO and Exeter students will showcase their craft and research through exhibition­s open to the university community and the broader public. Although the projects have distinct focuses, both will actively bridge literary archives to digital mediums, local history to internatio­nal audiences, and the past to the present.

The projects will demonstrat­e the interconne­ctedness of contempora­ry conversati­ons with those of the past.

“By engaging talented student artists and creative producers whose public-facing digital art and digital storytelli­ng animates local archival materials, the Press Play initiative aims to connect wider internatio­nal audiences with digitized cultural heritage projects,” says Dr. Shearer.

Those projects include the SpokenWeb, Famine Tales from India and Britain, and Poetry of the Lancashire Cotton Famine.

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Simon Rennie, Karis Shearer, Charlotte Tupman, Austyn Bourget-White, Ains Reid, Matthew Kenney, Kai Hagen, Myron Campbell and Gary Stringer.
Contribute­d Simon Rennie, Karis Shearer, Charlotte Tupman, Austyn Bourget-White, Ains Reid, Matthew Kenney, Kai Hagen, Myron Campbell and Gary Stringer.

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