Rationale:
The Lawrence and Lee Institute (TRI) holds a unique
set of design materials for a presently unknown German
or Austrian production of Boccaccio, including a working
model of the turntable used to change the settings.
Enormously popular in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, von Suppe's comic opera (1879;
American premiere 1880) has vanished from the repertory,
although its comic overture is still frequently performed
in orchestral concerts.
The
reconstruction demonstrates the abilities of computer
design to virtually realize three dimensional models,
including complex stage/ architectural designs involving
moving elements on several planes simultaneously,
the use of lighting, and performers' movement patterns.
Project:
Research identified the production for which the
design material is held, or narrow possibilities.
Researchers from the TRI and the Departments involved reconstructed, in a much detail as possible, the
elements of the production.
The virtual phase of the research, at ACCAD, translates the actual materials into computer images,
and develops techniques to produce a three-dimensional
virtual environment including lighting, costumes,
movement, and other stage elements, permitting production
artists to explore different ways of interpreting
the evidence interactively.
Results: A virtual performance of a forgotten
piece of theatre, dance, and music history, which
can be reproduced on the web and used as one element
of exploring the possibilities of distance learning,
as well as of computer assisted instruction.
The process of reconstructing Boccaccio also
served as the model for a proposed Honors course in virtual
reconstruction, which was submitted for approval
to the Honors Program in 2000-2001 academic year,
and served as the basis for distance learning proposals.