Download?doi=10.1.1.65. La réalité augmentée et l’art. Dans le cadre de la préparation de l’ Artcamp Dijon #2 , nous vous proposons un inventaire, non exhaustif, de ce qu’apporte ‘ou peu apporter’ la réalité augmentée à l’art.
Nous décomposerons cette revue en 3 articles : Les musées, L’art Numérique et les Visites Il existe déjà de très nombreuses application qui assistent les visiteurs durant leurs découverte des mussés. Ces applications sont soit disponibles : - directement sur les smartphones, - sur des tablettes spécifiques aux mussé, - des casques ou lunettes immersives, - des bornes interactives . La Réalité augmentée apporte une nouvelle dimension à la découverte des expositions. Les détracteurs de cette technologie ou les puristes critiquent ces applications en prétextant que le visiteur peut être noyé sous le flot d’informations et qu’il ne sera plus attentif aux œuvres. Comme nous le rapportons régulièrement la technologie existe, les périphériques sont développés, il suffit de les mixer et de trouver des usages novateurs.
Museum of the future: mobile augmented reality. Museums start to put interactive tools in everyone's hands, well beyond their four walls.
Museums serve to document the growth of arts and sciences of our society, and in recent years, have been able to reach across the miles to new audiences, thanks to the proliferation of the Internet. A new report suggests that museums are also becoming part of the mobile revolution -- yes, if you want to visit the Museum of London without flying all the way to Heathrow Airport, there's an app for that. (However, it's best to be in town to really experience the service): "The museum of London has launched an iPhone application which brings its extensive art and photographic collections alive in advance of the opening of spectacular new galleries next week. The free app, called "StreetMuseum," takes users to various sites in London where, via their iPhone screen, historical images of the city appear. Osity. Augmented Reality Field Trips & the 150th Anniversary of the U.S. Civil War. April 2011 will mark the 150th anniversary of the first hostilities of U.S.
Civil War, and museums, municipalities, and historic sites are making their preparations for the events and exhibits to commemorate it. And while, no doubt, times are tough for funding cultural heritage projects, there's a lot of excitement and momentum building around the sesquicentennial, making it a great opportunity for those exploring how technology can make history more interactive. "A more valuable field trip" - that's the argument that Pennsylvania high school social studies teacher Jeff Mummert makes, pointing to the increasing accessibility of both mobile and augmented reality technologies as ways to "offer deeply interactive projects for students and the general public. " To that end, Mummert has created the Civil War Augmented Reality Project (which recently evolved to become HistoriQuest).
Knocking Down the Museum Walls with Mobile AR. Museum of London Releases Augmented Reality App for Historical Photos. Streetmuseum is a new (and free) augmented reality iPhone app created by the Museum of London that allows you to browse historical photographs in various parts of the city.
The app leads you to various locations around London using either the map or GPS. Once you’re there, click the “3D View” button, and the app will recognize the location and overlay the historical photograph over the live video feed of the real world, giving you a brief glimpse into how the past looked. We’ve seen projects that overlaid historical photos over modern ones, but this is the first time we’ve seen an augmented reality app do it for you in real time. Here are a few more examples: If only this were available in every big city around the world. Museum of London – Street Museum (via Creative Review) ARTINFO: Virginia Museum Launches "Augmented Reality" Picasso Shows in New York, Philadelphia, D.C., Starbucks. The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts unveils its much-anticipated "Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris" show on February 19.
But art fans on the East Coast may not even have to make the trip down to Richmond to see the blockbuster. That's because Picasso just zoomed into the "augmented reality" age: Virtual versions of the exhibition will open at locations in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C., not to mention at all 33 Richmond-area Starbucks. To highlight the "augmented reality" aspect of an upcoming Picasso show, one exhibition poster renders the artist in QR codes. Courtesy Virginia Museum of Fine Arts The initiative comes courtesy of the Martin Agency, a Richmond-based advertising company which counts Microsoft, Morgan Stanley, and Walmart among its clients. Like what you see?