Results 1 - 7 of 7
Project Persons Year Tags
AR+RFID Lab at the Kröller-Müller Museum Yolande Kolstee, Wim van Eck, Melissa Coleman, Pawel Pokutycki (AR+RFID LAB) 2009 headmounted, graphic image recognition, marker logo's, still, single-user, 360 choice of perspective, large field of view, reactive to head position, laptop on wheels, still, space-specific, sculpture, garden, Kröller-Müller Museum
On July 11 our Lab presented a large Augmented Reality installation at the Sweet Summer Night: ILLUSION in the sculpture garden of the Kröller-Müller Museum. The Lab collaborated in this project with students from different departments of the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague
Film Museum - Augmented Sand Sculpture Theo Watson, Emily Gobeille (Film Museum Amsterdam) 2009 spacial projection, videomapping, sand sculpture, animation, sound, multi-user, 180 large field of view, natural eye movement, linear 2 minute animation, space-specific, projection mapping, sculpture, architecture
For the groundbreaking of the new Film Museum site in Amsterdam Overhoek I was asked by Wieden + Kennedy to develop an augmented projection to dynamically unveil a five meter long sand sculpture of the future building. Working with Emily Gobeille we developed a two minute animation that unveiled the building in a series of stages that highlighted both the architectural elements of the building as well as giving a preview of what people would experience inside.
Museum AR Kiosk (Total Immersion, Exhibit Engineering) 2008 desktop, graphic image recognition, marker, still, single user, small field of view, reactive to marker position, non-linear, informational, anywhere indoors, anatomy, human body
This augmented reality experience, created in partnership with Exhibit Engineering, puts 3D images of a beating human heart into the welcoming hands of visitors. « In a new gallery filled with cutting-edge exhibits designed to engage and educate visitors about the miracle of the human body, TI's solution delivers an experience that can't help but grab your attention » said Matt Browning, Director of Software Development for Exhibit Engineering.
Sgraffito in 3D Joachim Rotteveel (AR+RFID LAB) 2008 desktop, graphic image recognition, marker logo's, still, multi-user, small field of view, reactive to marker position, still, in front of any computer with camera, museum, informative, educational, history
rom October 25, 2008 until January 4, 2009 the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen in Rotterdam was exhibiting its wonderful collection of sgraffito objects from the period 1450-1550. Sgraffito is an ancient decorative technique in which patterns are scratched into the wet clay. The Dutch plates, bowls and cooking pots are part of the Van Beuningen-De Vriese collection. The artist Joachim Rotteveel has made this archaeological collection accessible in a spectacular way using 3D reconstruction techniques from the worlds of medicine and industry, including AR application provided by the AR+RFID Lab.
Solo-exhibition Michael Guidetti Michael Guidetti 2009 projection, video-mapping, painting, graphic animation, multi-user, 180 choice of perspective, large field of view, linear narrative, specific for that painting, painting, exhibition, museum, mixed media
Bounce Room 1 & 2 are 2 paintings by Michael Guidetti. They’re not just normal paintings, I would call them augmented paintings. Together with the paintings come projectors which add animation to the sceneries.
Triceratops Georg Klein (University of Oxford) 2009 handheld screen, envoirenment mapping, video, still image, semi multi-user due to large screen, 360 choice of perspective, small field of view, reactive to hand position, still, informational about the physical object, after mapping, space-specific, natural museum oxford, museum, education, informational
University of Oxford Natural History Museum Augmented Reality Tour. A map is made around a triceratops skull in the museum and an AR model is added. This work extends Georg Klein's Parallel Tracking and Mapping system to allow it to use multiple independent cameras and multiple maps. This allows maps of multiple workspaces to be made and individual augmented reality applications associated with each. As the user explores the world the system is able to automatically relocalize into previously mapped areas.
Unmakeablelove Sarah Kenderdine, Jeffrey Shaw (Museum Victoria, UNSW iCinema Centre, EPIDEMIC.) 2008 round screen, infrared light, the viewers, filmed and virtual imagery, multi-user, 180 large field of view, no narrative, anywhere, long set up, torch, flash-light
To explicitly articulate the conjunction between the real and virtual spaces in this work, the viewer’s virtual torch beams penetrate through the container and illuminate other viewers who are standing opposite them on other sides of the installation. This augmented reality is achieved using infra-red cameras that are positioned on each screen pointing at its respective torch operators, and the video images are rendered in real time onto each viewer’s screen so as to create the semblance of illuminating the persons opposite them. The resulting ambiguity experienced between the actual and rendered reality of the viewers’ presences in this installation, reinforce the perceptual and psychological tensions between ‘self’ and ‘other’.