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Immersive World Season 1 Episodes

Season 1 Episode Guide

10 Episodes 2019 - 2019

Episode 1

Immersive Theater

In this charter, the series presents the universe of New York's immersive theater from the standpoint of actors, dancers, and other performers who have become the biggest names in the genre. Focusing on the mega hit "Sleep No More" and the groundbreaking "Here", it explores the artists' relationship with the audience and the mystery behind the immersive productions.

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Episode 2

Digital Galleries

The evolution of visual arts has given rise to new electronic galleries, such as Artechouse, which already has branches in Washington DC, New York, and Miami, and projects like Super Real in New York, which elevated videomapping to the art category. With works commissioned especially for each location by new media artists, the installations have evolved into an interactive art type, where the public plays a role in the final piece.

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Episode 3

Immersive Musical Theater

Immersive theater shows have elevated the language of the genre with the use of music. It reveals behind the scenes of the musical "Here Lies Love," created by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, where audiences watch the show dancing in a megaclub as well as "The Great Comet of 1812," Broadway's first immersive production. "IMMERSIVE.WORLD" also shows the work of the innovative theater company Third Rail Projects, which has produced over 40 immersive shows.

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Episode 4

Non-fiction Immersion

Documentary films that address environmental problems, social issues and exotic places are increasingly making use of immersive media like V.R. These works have been generating buzz at major festivals and the independent market. On the other hand, many immersive shows and art installations, such as "Say Something Bunny" and "The Privilege of Escape", use real events as inspiration for a new kind of impactful storytelling.

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Episode 5

Immersive Intimacy

The series goes deeper into the world of immersive theater, featuring plays that bet on situations of extreme intimacy with the audience such as "Broken Bone Bathtub", which is presented to small groups of people in real apartment bathrooms and "Bleach", presented to only five people at a time in a bedroom in Brooklyn. It also features an interview with award-winning director Christine Jones, creator of Theater for One, a mobile "theater" for just one viewer. The series then heads to London where it features the Draw Me Close project, a Canada Film Board collaboration with the London National Theater that mixes actors, virtual reality, and immersive environments.

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Episode 6

Immersive Fantasy

Creators from various disciplines are looking for new avenues that blend immersive media, fantasy, and storytelling. Whether in virtual reality or theatrical experiences, the idea is to offer audiences the opportunity to escape the real world. Film festivals are investing in virtual reality narratives that deal with fantasy for children and youth, as seen at the Tribeca Film Festival, shown in this chapter. In London, Secret Cinema creates elaborate environments inspired by well-known films such as Moulin Rouge and Blade Runner. In New York, the immersive show Pip's Island peaks children's interest in participatory media.

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Episode 7

Immersive Museums

International museums increasingly rely on the power of immersive works to attract the public's attention. It's the case of the New Museum in New York, which has been showing immersive installations and performances, such as "Menesunda", by Argentinian artist Marta Minujin. This chapter also explores Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh, considered the world's first immersive museum, with works by Yayoy Kusama, James Turrell, and many others.

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Episode 8

Immersive Light

This chapter explores immersive art made with the use of light. Prior to the evolution of electronic arts, artists such as James Turrell and Dan Flavin became wizards of using light to create immersive environments and sculptures. In addition to their work, it also features another famous veteran artist, Anthony McCall, who has created light sculptures for 40 years, and Norwegian artist Anne Katrine Senstad, who creates immersive installations using neon tubes.

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Episode 9

Next Wave Immersive

The series explores the next wave of immersive works, showcasing Pittsburg-based theater company Bricolage, known for performing innovative immersive productions in unusual locations such as a science museum. The show "The Raven", set in a historic New York mansion, blends the work of an actress with state-of-the-art surround sound technology to offer an immersive experience revolving around the funeral of Edgar Alan Poe.

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Episode 10

Immersive Art & Beyond

Virtual reality is being used for numerous types of visual narratives and works that mix different media. "Chained - A Victorian Nightmare" intersperse virtual reality with live performers to achieve new levels of interaction. To raise awareness about global warming and rising sea levels, Dutch artist Daan Roosegaarde has created a public art installation called Waterlicht, which has been seen by thousands of people in Europe and the United States. And how can augmented reality be explored in journalism? The series talks to the interactive media director of the New York Times.

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