英文摘要 |
Audio-visual performance, created based on the irreversibility of time, is a one-way flow that requires artists to continually produce strong audiovisual rhythms and project all aspects of their work to the audience. The audience is expected to physically and consciously interpret the performance, rather than grasping a clear idea. This has long left the audience puzzled as to how they should perceive such performance. Questions such as “what does this piece of music represent?”, “what is this image?”, “what is the meaning of the sound, light, and rhythm created on site?” constantly haunt the audience’s mind. In consideration of the phenomenon, this study investigated Taiwan’s audio-visual performer duo “HH” in an attempt to describe the sensory resonance created by the multidimensional audio-visual performance from the characteristics of “multisensory experience where signals are deemed as events” and “interactions of rhythms between performers and the audience.” Moreover, this study aimed to explore potential means of performance appreciation. |