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"Luminous Windows" and "Photons, Neurons and Bits"

Formale Metadaten

Titel
"Luminous Windows" and "Photons, Neurons and Bits"
Untertitel
The Holography Initiative of the MIT Museum
Serientitel
Teil
57
Anzahl der Teile
57
Autor
Lizenz
CC-Namensnennung - keine Bearbeitung 2.0 UK: England & Wales:
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Identifikatoren
Herausgeber
Erscheinungsjahr
Sprache
ProduktionsortShenzhen, China

Inhaltliche Metadaten

Fachgebiet
Genre
Abstract
Holography for the 21st Century”. The event was a milestone for the MIT Museum, as well as for the field of holographic art. The exhibition showcased holography for the purpose of overcoming the material limits and hours of operation of the Museum and presenting a night exhibition of combined artistic and technical achievement that reached into the public space. “Luminous Windows”, that filled the Museum’s outdoor environment with light, color and virtual space through the winter nights, was a great success, drawing thousands of visitors through the four months of its run. Consequently, the MIT Museum has committed to presenting a “Luminous Windows” exhibition annually, with even-number years focused on technical achievements and odd- number years, artistic achievements in display holography. The success of “Luminous Windows” also spurred the development of a biennial, interdisciplinary forum at the leading edges of holography and potential partner fields: “Photons, Neurons and Bits: Holography for the 21st Century”. The event took place during the run of the inaugural “Luminous Windows” exhibition, and tapped into MIT culture of innovation and significant history of contribution to the advancement of holography, from the age of film to the digital age. Intensive, wide-ranging applications of digital technologies provided the general focus, and active and potential areas of holography innovation provided the subject matter for presentations and discussions, e. g., volume holography for biological research, 3-D optical illusions for brain research. These activities have helped to re-imagine and re-kindle the MIT Museum’s Holography and Spatial Imaging Initiative, and they have served to generate momentum and collective energy and discussion at MIT and beyond.