Friday, February 20, 2009

Professor Randall Packer Talks Opera and Multimedia

By Katie Burns-Yocum

Many people might not see the connection between a classical composer and the virtual computer world, but both play a huge role in the up and coming field of multimedia art.

One who can see this connection is former composer Randall Packer, the program coordinator and assistant professor of the multimedia art program at American University.

Packer is the author of Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality, one of the top texts internationally for teaching multimedia arts.

“Opera is the oldest, most advanced form of multimedia,” says Packer. “It combines all the arts: music, dance, and theater.” This is a connection no one else saw according to Packer.

“My thesis was never considered before I wrote this book,” said Packer. “Now there are lots of scholars and artists who have embraced this idea.”

Packer’s office in the Katzen Arts Center is organized chaos. It is filled with three Macintosh computers, a table and file cabinet covered with papers and books. It has a window looking out on the second-floor art studios.

Since the multimedia art specialization is interdisciplinary, Packer is the only professor in this area and his students take classes in other departments including the School of Communications and other courses in the art department.

A graduate of UC Berkley with a Ph.D. in music composition, he began as a composer before becoming interested in the technology available to artists.

After 20 years of combining his musical interests with other media in different ways, he discovered that he was working in an area called multimedia.

After moving from California to Washington, D.C., in 2000, Packer began to explore the role of artists in political and social arenas, leading to the formation of the U.S. Department of Art and Technology, a fake government agency which exists only in virtual reality.

The USDAT “supports the idealized definition of the artist as one whose reflections, ideas, aesthetic, sensibilities, and abilities can have significant and transformative impact on the world stage,” according to Packer’s website www.zakros.com.

This project produced published articles, videos and live performances, and media installations around the world. One project was the USDAT Visitor Center in the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., in fall 2003.

For the past five years, Packer has worked at AU to redesign the multimedia arts program, a new addition to the art department, to better teach multimedia history and aesthetics with multimedia techniques.

He said he wanted the program to become an integral part of the department’s interdisciplinary approach to art.

“I’d like to see that interdisciplinary approach go even beyond the arts and incorporate technology, political science, communication, and international relations,” he said in an April 2007 article in The American Weekly.

Despite spending most of his time teaching, Packer finds time to make his own art, including new art instillations.

“It’s not always easy” he said. “I try to involve my own work in teaching, try out ideas. I try to share my scholarship and research with my students.”

His work is mainly concerned with how individuals and the world they live in is influenced and impacted by new media forms.

“We live in a world permeated with media,” said Packer. “My courses give a view on the world that is good for understanding the world we live in.”

Packer sent all of his undergraduate multimedia students to the inauguration of President Obama on Jan. 20 and had them use the social networking site Twitter to communicate with one another and document the event.

They shared the experience technologically by documenting their individual experiences through Twitter and pictures to be brought together and presented as a dialogue.

“This assignment embodied multimedia art in that an experience was shared and interpreted collaboratively using technology and expressed collectively as composition,” said multimedia student Samuel Lavine. “Through this technological forms of communication were utilized to compose art.”

Packer said gaining a” critical and aesthetic understanding of the medium” and his approach can be a challenge for his students.

According to Packer, the key when helping students who are having trouble in one of his multimedia classes is to “make sure that they don’t give up. That’s the obstacle. They have to keep working at it.”

Packer teaches a General Education course titled The Artist’s Perspective: Multimedia and many of the students in his class have little or no art background.

These students have “so much energy,” says Packer. “They are much more enthusiastic and open to technology. They are eager to learn.”

Packer said he wished that more of the university’s students would explore multimedia art courses, which combine culture, history, theory, and technology.

But Packer said he does not simply want his students to interact with media; he wants them to become a critical part of it. This is practiced in the classroom according to graduate student Carolina Puente.

“My favorite part of his class is learning about new media artist and responding to their work through critical analysis,” she said.

Packer also challenges his students through having them do “criticism for new media artists and documenting their exhibitions,” said Puente.

“Some things he would describe as art or performance seem a bit of a stretch on the words,” said one of Packer’s General Education students.

According to Packer, one of his favorite things about teaching is “getting students excited about something they haven’t done before.”

Packer said he wants his students to appreciate art through the knowledge of and use of technology. He wants them to understand the aesthetic and philosophical implications of art as well.

“I have been able to experiment with photography and poetry, film and music, all in the context of using a computer as an artistic tool,” said Lavine.

For Randall Packer multimedia art, creating it and teaching it is like “opening up whole new world that turns everyday kinds of experiences into something creative.”

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Tuesday, February 3, 2009

McCain Supporters Embrace Obama


Inaug McCain
By Katie Burns-Yocum

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Even John McCain supporters converged upon the National Mall Tuesday, saying they believed Barack Obama’s inauguration as president was an important time for national unity.

Obama’s Inauguration Weekend, which spanned from Jan. 18 -20, was attended by a record 1.8 million people.

Many McCain supporters watched or attended the event. According to Courtney Klamar, a McCain supporter at American University, she attended President Obama’s inauguration because “this is a once in a lifetime experience, I want to be able to look back and say I was there. It’s a part of history.”

“Even people who don’t like Obama are excited,” said Sarah McGhee, a sophomore at American University. “This is a huge step for America; all this support even though they don’t agree with his message.”

Stephanie Scroggs, an Obama supporter and inaugural attendee, said that “McCain supporters are probably feeling sad but embracing this momentous occasion.”

One of these supporters embracing the occasion is Klamar. She said, “The current spirit of the country is not healthy. This inauguration symbolizes a new spirit for the country.”

“This is exciting, regardless of your ideals,” said American University freshman and McCain supporter, William Noel. “There’s an energetic spark in the city.”

Noel, who posted the Gallup Poll in his window daily, did not go to the event. He decided to stay away from the crowds and watch the live broadcast because the view would be better.

One McCain supporter wanted to attend, but stayed on the American University campus to cover shifts at the front desk in his residence hall. “It’s not out of bitterness, just helping out,” said Shane Carley, an American University student.

One of the largest groups present at the ceremony was that of the youth vote. “If it was McCain’s inauguration, there would certainly not be as many students,” said Carley.

“Maybe the same amount of people would be here if it was McCain’s inauguration, but Obama is a rock star. He unites people. People are here for Obama, not the inauguration,” said Klamar.

During the election, many Republicans felt that the media was too kind to Obama, yet Noel felt that in this instance all the press attention was “great, this is a big event, it’s a good thing, not negative.” Carley agreed, saying, “It’s their job.”

Despite differences in fundamental philosophies, McCain supporters do not wish any harm to the new president. Many felt that the high level of security was necessary.

Carley felt that the security precautions were necessary regardless of who was being inaugurated. “Having a president assassinated would be one of the worst things that could possibly happen in this country,” he stated.

According to Klamar the party change is not the main reason for the magnitude of Obama’s inauguration.

“It has nothing to do with political party,” she said. “Political parties are no longer the source of hope or change; the candidates are.”

Carley disagreed saying, “the fact that a Democratic president has been elected after a long and unsuccessful Republican tenure is significant.”

“The fact that he is a Democrat and thus at least has different fundamental philosophies is a significant change in itself,” Carley added. “Given the situation in which the country finds itself, that alone is important.”

This inauguration has rallied so much support “because of the difficulties and disappointment of the last eight years,” according to McGhee.

McGhee said that she would still attend the inauguration if it was for McCain because it would still be important to the country.

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