| Questionaire: 
              Raindance 1. 
              With what kind of Intention the real public urban space was chosen 
              as place for the project? Are everybody's accessibility all day 
              or public sphere
 an important issue for the project? 
 The 
              piece was originall designed for presentation at the Swatch Pavilion 
              in the 1998 expo in Lisbon. It was designed to engage visitors to 
              the pavilion in a playful interactive situation, during which they 
              and their moving umbrellas became an animated feature of the facade 
              of the pavilion.Circumstances of presentation at Ars Electronica:
 I won a prize at the Ars Electronica so they invited me to present 
              the piece during the festival week. I requested an outdoor space 
              both for practical reasons and because of the inherently public 
              (participatory) nature of the work. As things evolved, the OK Centrum 
              Staff suggested that we stage a smaller version of the piece in 
              the Hauptplatz as a sort of advertisment to entice people to visit 
              the larger version at the OK Centrum, which seemed to me to be a 
              good idea. As (I ) expected, this small beach-shower-like version 
              caught all kinds of passers-by - children, old people on their sunday 
              stroll, workmen etc.
 2. 
              Shall the project make a special contribution for a new "better" 
              public space? And what importance in that context has the use of 
              new media? 
 I 
              would hope that this kind of experience improves the quality of 
              the public space. A temporary exhibition like this, however can 
              only have a temporary effect. As regards "new media" most 
              of it is just TV all over again, and does not engage the spectator 
              actively enough to make much difference. RainDance, while not "new" 
              media but perhaps "never media" succeeds, I think, because 
              it catches people by surprise - the  
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