iDesign

Project Overview

ARC Project Investigators: Dennis Del Favero, Michael Scott-Mitchell, Maurice Pagnucco, Caroline Wake, Susanne Thurow, Lawrence Wallen, Kip Williams and Ben Schostakowski
ARC Project Title: Reformulating set design aesthetics via a dialogical model of interactivity
Project Funding: ARC LP170100471
2018-2020

The iDesign project transforms contemporary performance design through the application of novel forms of dialogical aesthetics, i.e. developing capability for users to create and adjust set models at the click of a button and to immediately review them as life-sized virtual renditions. Leveraging the 360-degree AVIE visualisation platform, users can begin drafting their designs within a detail-rich 3D environment that digitally replicates of the real-life venue their production will be staged at. Using a range of interaction methods, such as gestural, mouse + keyboard as well as voice input, they can sketch or import architectural forms and props, and refine these by adjusting numerous parameters, such as size, colour, texture and placement. An integrated AI system that, for example calculates sightlines and occlusions, can assist in fine-tuning designs to grant audiences the best possible view of the stage action. _iDesign_’s real-time lighting tools can imbue the virtual model with atmosphere and mood, allowing creative teams to trial and test the capability of a theatre’s lighting grid through direct plug-in with conventional industry software.

The system supports virtual collaboration between creative teams in multiple locations by supplying a visual articulation of design ideas at 1:1 scale, eliminating the need for abstracting from or translating technical drawings, which eases communication between different stakeholders. For example, directors, dramaturgs and choreographers can annotate the digital model, adding notes or placing animated actor avatars into the set and pathing their movements through the object constellations, while multimedia designers can integrate screen clusters or map dynamic digital projections. iDesign is a networked system, which means that users in different geographical locations can simultaneously access and implement changes from a range of digital devices. For example, a set designer may trial their ideas in AVIE and a lighting designer may add different lighting solutions from the convenience of their home using a desktop computer, while the director –while travelling– reviews and annotates their work from their mobile phone.

iDesign thus rethinks traditional modelling paradigms that have been constrained by sequential mock-up procedures and after-the-fact evaluation, by increasing the available means for contextualising and iterating design concepts, which positively impacts their viability. Specifically, the project digitally transforms the traditional physical scale model paradigm known as a ‘Bauprobe’ by streamlining production pipelines and reconfiguring the design process in ways that increase the economic efficiencies of set modelling. Its dialogical framework transforms the set design process into an agile real-time exchange between users and digital systems, resolving the inefficiencies which result from segregated pipelines that require complex manual assembly and review.

iBauprobe Demo Picture
Michael Scott-Mitchell “Storm Boy” set design inside iBauprobe, Sydney Theatre Company

While focused on performance design, the research also provides a direct benefit to set design for the art, events, film, installation, interior, music/opera sectors, as each involve similar design processes that can be enhanced through a collaborative and immersive full-body 3D modelling framework.

The iDesign project is financially supported under the Australian Research Council’s Linkage funding scheme with Industry Partners Sydney Theatre Company and National Institute of Dramatic Art.
A proof-of-concept was previously supported through the University of New South Wales, entitled iBauprobe.

Exhibition

  • Sydney Theatre Wharf Complex, Sydney, 2020/21

Publications

  • Del Favero, Dennis, Thurow, Susanne & Wallen, Lawrence (2021 – forthcoming), ‘Inhabitable Models– Immersive Intelligent Aesthetics for Scenographic Design’, Theatre & Performance Design 7.1-2: tbc.
  • Del Favero, Dennis, Thurow, Susanne & Wake, Caroline (2020), ‘Dialogical Aesthetics – Reconfiguring Theatrical Spaces through Digital Technology ’, K. Dreckmann, M. Butte & E. Vomberg (eds.), Technologien des Performativen (357-65). Bielefeld: transcript, LP170100471 (2018-2021)
  • Del Favero, Dennis, Thurow, Susanne, Scott-Mitchell, Michael & Wallen, Lawrence (2019), ‘iDesign – New Capabilities for Set Design’, Conference Presentation; peer-reviewed abstract only; presented at PQ Talks @ Prague Quadrennial of Performance Design & Space, In- dustrial Palace & Exhibition Grounds, Prague, Czech Republic, LP170100471 (2018-2021)
  • Thurow, Susanne (2017), ‘Response to the Metamaterial Turn: Performative Digital Methodologies for Creative Practice and Analytical Documentation in the Arts’, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art 17.2: 238-50, doi:10.1080/14434318.2017.1450071, LP170100471 (2018-2021)

PBB
David Fleischer “Playing Beatie Bow” set design inside iDesign, Sydney Theatre Company

iDesign Set Design Example

iDesign Storm Boy