Sound activates a series of LED lights on this functional (and fashionable) dress.
FROM THE ARTIST:
Bracelets that communicate your location to a central computer. Jackets with “soft” button controls to lock and unlock your front door. Antennas woven into military uniforms. Shirts with built-in heart and perspiration monitors. These are only a few examples of the fusion of clothing and computing, born in the 21st century as “wearable technologies.” Innovative, invasive, or intriguing, these inventions will eventually become part of our everyday existence.
“Wired Wear,” consists of a series of one-of-a-kind articles of clothing equipped with custom electronics. Each object is designed to fill a specific personal need and is fitted to my body’s measurements. This enables me to perform with them and demonstrate their use in the accompanying videos and in live tradeshow contexts. This combination of electronics, fashion design, and performance is what I call, “Performative Technologies.”
“Performative Technologies” are devices developed specifically for me to perform in social interactions and public spaces, and most importantly, in the performance of my roles as woman, teacher, girlfriend, daughter. A typical cyborg hybridizes machine and organism in order to upgrade human physical performance, efficiency or utility. WiredWear enhances and expands performance beyond the athletic, economic, or theater contexts and draws attention to technology’s mediation of our everyday “performances.”
Recent discourses about Cyborgs often revolve around the ramifications of enhancing human capabilities—memory, intelligence, vision, and the larger topic of genetically engineering specific traits. In contrast to both of these, WiredWear takes a playful and critical look at wearable technologies by providing humorous and poetic interventions in these disciplines.
Credits:
Design and Modelling: Heidi Kumao
Train: Amtrak
Heidi is a faculty member at A&D.
Wired Wear is Simply Awesome. Like Hussein Chalayan's exploration in 2001 with his aircraft material dress that could change form. It was his innovative ideas towards nature,science, and beauty. Your innovative, forward thinking dress that reacts to sound waves intensity is very unique. I also could guess that in the future this type of trend will become a part of pop culture. I as many people would like to see more of your forward thinking designs. Warmest Regards, ShaunyWalker www.shaunywalker.com
Posted by ShaunyWalker on October 29, 2011