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How to Create Emotion Through Technology

Three of the world’s most exciting tech-driven creators each get 7 minutes to show us how it’s actually done. The only brief we’ve given them: make us feel something real.

How to Create Emotion Through Technology

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When:
Tue 21st Apr 26 @ 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Where:

The Box

Ministry of Sound, 103 Gaunt St
London, SE1 6DP United Kingdom

The Matrix in Shared reality with Little Cinema at COSM

Using technology and science to craft immersive sonic experiences for unorthodox venues.

Conceiving multimedia installations that transform artistic performances into engaging experiences.

Way too many “tech-driven experiences” don’t make you feel anything.

This is different.

Three of the world’s most exciting tech-driven creators each get 7 minutes to show us how it’s actually done:

From France — Bruno Ribeiro (ribeirobruno.com)
Working at the frontier of shared immersive worlds, Bruno will talk about his work with Jay Rinsky and Little Cinema on The Matrix in shared reality at COSM – where scale, story, and technology combine to create collective emotional experiences.

From Germany — Felipe Sánchez Luna (KLING KLANG KLONG)
A creative director pushing the edges of light, sound, and spatial installations—known for turning abstract tech into visceral, physical moments. The KLING KLANG KLONG team’s audioscapes opened up this morning’s Summit in The 103.

From Canada — Catherine Turp (Moment Factory)
One of the minds behind globally renowned immersive environments like ‘Lumina Night Walks’ and large-scale multimedia spectacles that consistently move audiences at scale.

This is NOT a panel. There’ll be minimal explanation.

Just sound, light, visuals, and instinct—used well enough to actually move a room full of people.

They can show a case. Build a moment. Drop us into something.

The only brief we’ve given them: make us feel something real.

Awe. Tension. Joy. Unease… let’s see!

If it works, you’ll know. If it doesn’t, you’ll know that too.

Three different backgrounds. Three different creative languages. One shared question:

Can technology really make us feel – or are we all just pretending it does?