Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/T_Visionarium> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 items per page.
- T_Visionarium abstract "T_Visionarium is an art installation by Neil Brown, Dennis Del Favero, Matthew McGinity and Jeffrey Shaw and Peter Weibel developed through the iCinema Centre for Interactive Cinema Research at The University of New South Wales in co-operation with ZKM Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe. In contrast to conventional cinema, where viewers passively watch a singular linear story unfold on a flat screen, T_Visionarium allows viewers to explore and edit a multitude of stories, in 3 dimensions, on a 360-degree fully surrounding screen.T_Visionarium takes two forms. The first version, T_Visionarium I (2003), is set within an inflatable dome, named EVE or the Extended Virtual Environment, 12 metres wide and 9 metres high. This immersive environment was invented by Shaw in 1993. Once inside EVE viewers wear a head mounted position tracking device and headphones and step onto a control platform in the middle of the dome. This interface device enables the viewer's head movements to control the movement of the projection system. By moving the direction of their head, and hence their gaze, viewers navigate around the images projected onto the interior of the dome. The second version, T_Visionarium II (2008), is set within AVIE, or the Advanced Visualisation and Interaction Environment. AVIE is the world's first 360 degree stereoscopic projection cinema 1. AVIE is a 120-square metre circular screen that surrounds the audience and provides the environment for a wholly immersive three-dimensional cinematic experience. AVIE allows audiences to wander at will through the projection space without having to sit in a fixed location as in a conventional cinema or to stand on a control platform as in T_Visionarium I, interacting with the projected information as if they are really there 2.Viewers wearing three-dimensional glasses step inside a cylindrical cinema screen measuring four metres high and 10 metres in diameter. Twelve digital projectors create a high-resolution stereoscopic 3D image on this screen, and the audio is spatially enhanced via a 24- channel surround sound system.".
- T_Visionarium wikiPageExternalLink article.aspx?id=126281.
- T_Visionarium wikiPageExternalLink spench.net.
- T_Visionarium wikiPageExternalLink fichaartista.php?id=145.
- T_Visionarium wikiPageExternalLink prj_tvis_II.html.
- T_Visionarium wikiPageExternalLink www.jeffrey-shaw.net.
- T_Visionarium wikiPageID "15037418".
- T_Visionarium wikiPageRevisionID "509616603".
- T_Visionarium hasPhotoCollection T_Visionarium.
- T_Visionarium subject Category:Digital_art.
- T_Visionarium subject Category:Digital_media.
- T_Visionarium subject Category:New_media.
- T_Visionarium subject Category:New_media_art.
- T_Visionarium type Abstraction100002137.
- T_Visionarium type Company108058098.
- T_Visionarium type DigitalMedia.
- T_Visionarium type Group100031264.
- T_Visionarium type Institution108053576.
- T_Visionarium type NewMedia.
- T_Visionarium type Organization108008335.
- T_Visionarium type SocialGroup107950920.
- T_Visionarium type YagoLegalActor.
- T_Visionarium type YagoLegalActorGeo.
- T_Visionarium type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- T_Visionarium comment "T_Visionarium is an art installation by Neil Brown, Dennis Del Favero, Matthew McGinity and Jeffrey Shaw and Peter Weibel developed through the iCinema Centre for Interactive Cinema Research at The University of New South Wales in co-operation with ZKM Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe.".
- T_Visionarium label "T Visionarium".
- T_Visionarium sameAs m.03h5hn0.
- T_Visionarium sameAs Q7672687.
- T_Visionarium sameAs Q7672687.
- T_Visionarium sameAs T_Visionarium.
- T_Visionarium wasDerivedFrom T_Visionarium?oldid=509616603.
- T_Visionarium isPrimaryTopicOf T_Visionarium.