SmartPhone Implementations. Design Agencies. Hardware/Network. SPANN/Dallas. Blog | Revolutionary language-detecting QR codes – for use in museums, gallaries, archives, libraries, gardens, art installations, and more! Originally published on The Glam Wiki Experience. Following the exhibition of “Joan Miró. The Ladder of Escape” which opened in Bacelona on October 15, 2011, a collaboration between the Fundació Joan Miró (Joan Miró Foundation) in Barcelona and the Catalan Wikipedia was proposed.
The exhibition was open to the public in Barcelona from October 16, 2011 and March 18, 2012. Before it was shown at the Tate in London and later traveled to the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. The project intended to stick QR codes alongside some of the most prominent artworks of the exhibition. This project was an example of a new way to visit museums and access to culture. CASE STUDY: QRpedia real use at Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona.
PHASE 1. A few months before the start of the exhibition, the curators from the Joan Miró Foundation created a list of 17 outstanding works that would be shown at the forthcoming exhibit and sent it to the group of local Wikipedians. 2. PHASE 3. Museum 2.0. Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, announced new smartphone app. The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, announced a new smartphone application on Monday that will be available on Android, iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad. Now, those interested in Warhol's pieces and collections can get an in-depth look at the art in the museum by also examining archival materials, film, source images, video clips, letters, and audio. The Warhol App will cost $2.99 for smartphones and $3.99 for tablet-style devices. To get a better idea exactly what the app looks like, check out this video: Filed under: Stories, North America, United States, Video, Budget Travel, Internet Tools, News, Women's Travel.