Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance

The aim of this research was to explore the possible integration of digital technologies and contemporary jewellery towards the development of digital jewellery; jewellery objects embedded with electronic components. I sought to investigate the relevancies and appropriateness of such integration as...

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Main Author: Wallace, Jayne
Other Authors: Dearden, Andrew ; Fisher, Tom ; Press, Mike ; White, Hazel
Published: Sheffield Hallam University 2007
Subjects:
708
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.500467
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5004672018-09-05T03:31:41ZEmotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significanceWallace, JayneDearden, Andrew ; Fisher, Tom ; Press, Mike ; White, Hazel2007The aim of this research was to explore the possible integration of digital technologies and contemporary jewellery towards the development of digital jewellery; jewellery objects embedded with electronic components. I sought to investigate the relevancies and appropriateness of such integration as extensions of contemporary jewellery through personally and emotionally significant experience. A critical contextual review reveals that wearable digital objects are fast emerging phenomena, but that the majority of existing approaches to their development, both conceptual and physical, are from outside the field of contemporary jewellery. In consequence the majority of developments commonly miss many of the subtleties and dynamics of what contemporary jewellery can be. Notable differences relate to interpretations of the aesthetics of jewellery, the relationship jewellery may have with the body and the role jewellery may play within human relationships. This critique is extended through the notion of the gadget. Current approaches to the design of wearable digital objects are led chiefly by an opportunistic use of the body as a mobile location serving to satisfy an increasing desire for ubiquitous computing. Such approaches encourage interpretations of digital objects as function led devices that have a transferable significance, are part of a fast paced consumption cycle and neglect considerations of emotionally rich interactions between people and digital objects. I have developed a practice-centred methodology rooted in craft practice that tests the appropriateness of contemporary jewellery practice as a creative strategy and research tool in the development of personal and emotionally significant digital jewellery. My process focuses on the involvement of individual participants with the aim of weaving aspects of their personal histories that are emotionally meaningful to them into pieces of digital jewellery. Innovative methods (stimuli) draw on methods from Interaction Design and atypical approaches to contemporary jewellery practice to facilitate contemporary jewellery practice as a directly social activity. In addition the research develops a perspective of the interconnected sensibilities within craft practice, of beauty, enchantment and empathy that enable it to offer an approach centred on the social and discursive elements of emotion. The participants' responses to the digital jewellery proposals reveal insights into opposing expectations and assumptions of digital objects and jewellery objects and also how the digital jewellery proposals were interpreted and appropriated in a personally emotionally significant context. Additional insights are revealed relating to perceptions of jewellery as intensely personal types of objects, strong connections between participants' inter-personal human relationships and their personal criteria for beauty and to shifts between how the participants referred to the pieces as personal or shared experiences depending on whether they regarded them as a piece of digital or non-digital jewellery. The research culminates in a body of work, both physical and conceptual that has relevance for both design and theory.708Sheffield Hallam Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.500467http://shura.shu.ac.uk/20489/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 708
spellingShingle 708
Wallace, Jayne
Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
description The aim of this research was to explore the possible integration of digital technologies and contemporary jewellery towards the development of digital jewellery; jewellery objects embedded with electronic components. I sought to investigate the relevancies and appropriateness of such integration as extensions of contemporary jewellery through personally and emotionally significant experience. A critical contextual review reveals that wearable digital objects are fast emerging phenomena, but that the majority of existing approaches to their development, both conceptual and physical, are from outside the field of contemporary jewellery. In consequence the majority of developments commonly miss many of the subtleties and dynamics of what contemporary jewellery can be. Notable differences relate to interpretations of the aesthetics of jewellery, the relationship jewellery may have with the body and the role jewellery may play within human relationships. This critique is extended through the notion of the gadget. Current approaches to the design of wearable digital objects are led chiefly by an opportunistic use of the body as a mobile location serving to satisfy an increasing desire for ubiquitous computing. Such approaches encourage interpretations of digital objects as function led devices that have a transferable significance, are part of a fast paced consumption cycle and neglect considerations of emotionally rich interactions between people and digital objects. I have developed a practice-centred methodology rooted in craft practice that tests the appropriateness of contemporary jewellery practice as a creative strategy and research tool in the development of personal and emotionally significant digital jewellery. My process focuses on the involvement of individual participants with the aim of weaving aspects of their personal histories that are emotionally meaningful to them into pieces of digital jewellery. Innovative methods (stimuli) draw on methods from Interaction Design and atypical approaches to contemporary jewellery practice to facilitate contemporary jewellery practice as a directly social activity. In addition the research develops a perspective of the interconnected sensibilities within craft practice, of beauty, enchantment and empathy that enable it to offer an approach centred on the social and discursive elements of emotion. The participants' responses to the digital jewellery proposals reveal insights into opposing expectations and assumptions of digital objects and jewellery objects and also how the digital jewellery proposals were interpreted and appropriated in a personally emotionally significant context. Additional insights are revealed relating to perceptions of jewellery as intensely personal types of objects, strong connections between participants' inter-personal human relationships and their personal criteria for beauty and to shifts between how the participants referred to the pieces as personal or shared experiences depending on whether they regarded them as a piece of digital or non-digital jewellery. The research culminates in a body of work, both physical and conceptual that has relevance for both design and theory.
author2 Dearden, Andrew ; Fisher, Tom ; Press, Mike ; White, Hazel
author_facet Dearden, Andrew ; Fisher, Tom ; Press, Mike ; White, Hazel
Wallace, Jayne
author Wallace, Jayne
author_sort Wallace, Jayne
title Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
title_short Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
title_full Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
title_fullStr Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
title_full_unstemmed Emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
title_sort emotionally charged : a practice-centred enquiry of digital jewellery and personal emotional significance
publisher Sheffield Hallam University
publishDate 2007
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.500467
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