Inexsistens: Lovestory

Jakub Wróblewski, Andrei Isakov, Przemysław Danowski
LOVESTORY
, 2020
VR experience, six degrees of freedom HMD, motion capture, audio system
choreography: Magdalena Przybysz 
For viewers 18 years of age or older 

Jakub Wróblewski, Andrei Isakov, Przemysław Danowski, Piotr Kucia
LOVESTORY. Postsexual telematic experience
, 2021
Imagine Film Festival, Amsterdam Live VR performance,
support: HTC VIVE, Bones Studio, Bemix Media Group
Performed by: Liwia Bargiel, Bartosz Kiełbowicz 

Lovestory is an interactive experience in virtual reality, participants given a high degree of freedom. Key concepts include simulation – intermediation of the physical body by its virtual version. Consequently, the body (defined as the user’s actual body and its avatar) becomes the main subject, object and carrier of the experience. Bespoke technology-captured motion engaged in by two performers (real people) is the main trope of the act. 

Artists equate the idea of acquiring the body and taking over another being with tulpa1, a concept derived from the Tibetan mysticism and occasionally applied as a synonym for phenomenon” or “thought-form”. The concept of an experience scenario arises from interest in early science fiction film adaptations. 

Explorations within the project focus on VR and the transhumanist idea of a virtual connection between two people, studies of bodily structure, and the capacity for expressing one’s motoric abilities through a specific aesthetic. The project addresses interpersonal contact limitations associated with current pandemic circumstances (lockdowns, social distancing, controlled accessibility of shared functional space, travel restrictions, etc.), and the consequent pushout of social contact into virtual reality. 

1The Collins dictionary offers a simplified definition of tulpa: “a being or object that is created in the imagination by visualization techniques such as in Tibetan mysticism”, see tulpa in: Collins Dictionary [online], https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tulpa [accessed on July 29th 2021]. See also S. Veissiere, ‘Varieties of Tulpa Experiences: The Hypnotic Nature of Human Sociality, Personhood, and Interphenomenality’, in: Hypnosis and Meditation: Towards an Integrative Science of Conscious Planes, ed. by A. Raz, M. Lifshitz, Oxford 2016.