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Future Human-textile existence in digital and physical realities
Moderated by: Rochele Gloor and Kristin Carlson
Date and Time: October 9, 2026

Los Angeles, USA Fri, Oct 9, 2026 at 1:00 pm PDT
New York, USA Fri, Oct 9, 2026 at 4:00 pm EDT
London, United Kingdom Fri, Oct 9, 2026 at 9:00 pm BST
Melbourne, Australia Sat, Oct 10, 2026 at 7:00 am AEDT

  Call for Participation: https://forms.gle/eXzZUMJ4gRbtadKR6
  Deadline: August 15, 2026

Session Description:

For nearly every human on the planet, we spend our lives wrapped in textiles. Textiles mediate our relationship to the environment and our experiences of embodiment. Their material qualities form a symbiotic relationship with the body that defines identity and cultural representation. As digital and physical realities converge, textiles move into new forms of material and immaterial expression. In virtual worlds, fantastical bodies and dematerialized garments reflect collective desires and imagined futures, while advances in biomaterials, 3D printing, zero-waste weaving, and smart textile research transform what garments can be in physical space.

The convergence of digital and physical textile developments suggests a future in which textiles evolve from clothing into interfaces that bridge knowledge, society, and human experience. In digital environments, speculative design and virtual textiles allow individuals to inhabit forms unconstrained by physical limitations. Algorithms enable digital garments to function as expressive interfaces for embodied experience and cultural narratives. Virtual environments also support the preservation of intangible heritage through textile representation in immersive and interactive storytelling. Meanwhile, innovation in biomaterials, smart fibers and textiles, and zero-waste systems continues to redefine materiality in the physical world.

As emerging technologies blur the boundary between physical and virtual realities, textiles move into new spatial, experiential, and symbolic dimensions. How future garments, whether digitally simulated, physically manufactured, or existing in hybrid states, will influence human identity and cultural continuity is important to this discussion. This talk considers how textiles may shape new forms of human–technological existence, potentially acting as connectors between physical bodies and virtual selves while opening space to reflect on environmental, cultural, and technological contexts.


Moderator(s):
Rochele Gloor

Rochele Gloor is an emergent technologies artist, researcher, and designer living in New York. She worked as a creative director in her laboratory of experimentation for the fashion future and, in 2020, transitioned her practice to 3D digital art and immersive technologies, holding a master’s degree in Creative Technologies. She is an advisory member for generative AI at UIUC and at the School of Visual Arts, in New York, where she works as Assistant Director for Innovation Technologies in the MFA Computer Arts program. She is a International Advisor of the VIEW Conference. Her recent research focuses on multi-person co-embodiment using motion capture in real-time technologies, and her artistic interests lie in aesthetics and contemplation.

Kristin Carlson

Dr. Kristin Carlson is an Associate Professor in the School of Creative Technologies at Illinois State University, investigating the intersection of computation and embodied creative processes. Her background includes design thinking, tangible interactions, media performance, and computational creativity. She is currently interested in soft technologies and is experimenting with conductive materials in a variety of textile techniques to explore embodied experiences. Carlson holds a BFA in Dance from UIUC and a PhD in Interactive Arts and Technology from Simon Fraser University. She currently chairs the Steering Committee for the International Conference on Movement and Computing (MOCO).