UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Have you ever caught your reflection in a window as you pass and wonder who else has done the same? How many times have you paid no mind to the reaching limbs of the pine outside the Penn State animal sciences building? What is the difference between the parenting of children and the domestication of animals?
200 Acres, a new self-guided touring app, will challenge users’ knowledge of Penn State by providing some new perspectives on the University’s original land, history and purpose. The free, site-specific walk “through memories of wildness” is a creative partnership between the Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State and theater artist Marike Splint at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television.
“Layered with disarming metaphors, historical details and personal musings, 200 Acres will take you on a personal meditation through the emotional, physical, cultural and geographical landscapes we inhabit,” Splint said in a project statement.
Combining narrative, composition and sound recordings, 200 Acres is a solo sensory experience that guides the user through designed and serendipitous paths while seeking out the extraordinary in the mundane — “a reflective and poetic experience suggesting other ways of seeing,” Splint said.
Visit 200 Acres online to download the app and for more information.
The project, a reference to the tract of land Penn State first occupied, is the sequel to 32 Acres, another of Splint’s apps, which highlights a plot of green space in Los Angeles. 200 Acres’ voice-guided, one-mile tour leads the user on an introspective walking and prompted experience along a route leaving from the patio of Eisenhower Auditorium and ending at The Arboretum at Penn State.
Splint’s commentary about the land’s past and the University’s beginning weave together rich histories of trees from overseas, reflections on family togetherness, and musings on the milking barns and mountain views.
“200 Acres is an immersive and site-specific sound experience … about how we shape nature, and how nature shapes us,” she said.