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Mark Reaney
Professor

Professor Mark Reaney

 

 

 

Department of Theatre and Film
The University of Kansas
Murphy Hall
1530 Naismith Drive, Room 233
Lawrence, KS 66045-3102
Phone: 785- 864-2690
Fax: 785-864-5251
Email

Fall 2008 semester
Office hours
:

- Wednesday: 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. and 1:00-3:00 p.m.
- Friday:
10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Courses:
- TH&F 116 Scenographic Techniques (#28808)
- TH&F 324 Beginning Lighting Design for Theatre, Film, and Video (#42821)
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Mark Reaney is a Professor in the Department of Theatre & Film at the University of Kansa. He received his M.F.A. in Scenic Design from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and taught for three years at the University of Tulsa before moving to Kansas in 1987.

With around 150 design credits, Mark is a winner of national and international awards for scenic design and a pioneer in the use of computer graphics in theatre design. Mark is currently Director of the Institute for the Exploration of Virtual Realities, a research group actively exploring the links between real-time computer simulations and theatrical performance. Mark's original VR technology and designs for KU's 1995 production of The Adding Machine won international acclaim and the attention of both theatre and computing professionals all over the world.

Since then, i.e.VR has continued it's work by developing VR tools for scenic designers, studying the possible uses of 3-D video for transmitting and recording live performance events and creating working VR scenic models for the world-wide-web. In 1996 members of i.e.VR staged a production of Arthur Kopit's Wings for KU's University Theatre. This production broke new ground by outfitting an entire audience with virtual reality head-mounted displays.

In1998, Reaney and i.e.VR staged a production of a new script, Tesla Electric. This production introduced the use of panoramic, photo-realistic, computer generated images. The 1999 production of Machinal broke new ground in the combination of virtual reality and live video images. A collaboration with the University of Kent at Canterbury, England produced the exciting 2000 VR production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. And, the 2001 production of the children's theatre piece Dinosaurus introduced the use of real-time virtual characters in the form of giant dinosaurs!

More information about i.e.VR is available on the world-wide-web at http://www.ku.edu/~ievr.

Click here to view Curriculum Vitae.