about Me
Jeremy Yuille
mcd Studio
Level 5, Building 4
RMIT City Campus
Melbourne, Australia
postal location
School of Applied Communication
RMIT University
Melbourne, Australia.
3000
short Bio :
Jeremy Yuille is an interaction designer, digital media artist and academic specializing in interactive audio visual and design systems. He is often asked by designers, artists and programmers to “make my ideas work.â€
He has a Bachelor of Design Studies from the Architecture department of the University of Queensland and a Masters of Design from SIAL at RMIT University. The exegesis titled Collaboration in Sonic Design: frameworks for designing interactive sound environments is available in pdf
Jeremy manages the Multiuser Environments Program for the Australasian CRC for Interaction Design (ACID), where his current projects include
- senseMix - creating & sharing creative mobile content
- Virtual Communities - socially enabled knowledge management for virtual teams
- HDM - its all about people
Jeremy is a co-founder of the Media and Communication Design Studio at RMIT, where he supervises postgraduate students, and holds interaction design studios.
In addition, he irregularly performs and releases music and net.art under the guise of seo, most recently his work was shown as part of ‘::contagion:: - Australian New Media @ the Centenary of Federation’ at The Film Centre, Wellington, NZ. and ‘Variable Resistance’ a survey of Australian Electronic music at SF MOMA.
Recent collaborative projects include:
interactive sound design for lifesigns, an installation by Troy Innocent commissioned by the ACMI for the “2004 Australia Culture now†exhibition. Lifesigns has recently been exhibited at ARS Electronica 2004.
http://www.iconica.org
interaction design for “Sounds Like Techno†an international award winning online documentary for Film Victoria and the Australian Broadcast Corporation
http://www2.abc.net.au/arts/soundsliketechno
programming on D3, a “prototype for creating a stop-motion narrative†for Toysatellite, exhibited at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image (ACMI)
http://www.acmi.net.au/d3.jsp