Michelangelo FoundationMichelangelo Foundation Homo FaberHomo Faber Event Guide
EN IT    Newsletter
IT / EN
Notizie Initiatives - posted on 10 July, 2020
Vividly: Virtual Exhibition

Thanks to Vividly, a virtual reality start-up, you can now digitally view some of the porcelain artworks on display in Skuja Braden’s exhibition Samsara at the Museum of Decorative Arts and Design, in Riga, Latvia. The technology allows you to experience the solo exhibition in 3D, with the possibility to zoom in on a selection of porcelain pieces, and to examine every angle and the details. Five sculptures of Ilga’s Altar are digitized and showcased through Vividly by using photogrammetry for 3D spatial modelling. The initiative enables the museum to give the public a preview of the exhibition, whilst their doors still remain closed to visitors. A small taster of the 200 hundred Skuja Braden works of art on display, the artist duo’s most significant solo exhibition to date. Skuja Braden exhibitions are always unique, and the style of their objects sets new boundaries for ceramic and porcelain art, as shown by the works selected for this virtual event.

Read more

Notizie

Vividly: Virtual Exhibition

Initiatives - Posted on 10 July, 2020

Thanks to Vividly, a virtual reality start-up, you can now digitally view some of the porcelain artworks on display in Skuja Braden’s exhibition Samsara at the Museum of Decorative Arts and Design, in Riga, Latvia. The technology allows you to experience the solo exhibition in 3D, with the possibility to zoom in on a selection of porcelain pieces, and to examine every angle and the details. Five sculptures of Ilga’s Altar are digitized and showcased through Vividly by using photogrammetry for 3D spatial modelling. The initiative enables the museum to give the public a preview of the exhibition, whilst their doors still remain closed to visitors. A small taster of the 200 hundred Skuja Braden works of art on display, the artist duo’s most significant solo exhibition to date. Skuja Braden exhibitions are always unique, and the style of their objects sets new boundaries for ceramic and porcelain art, as shown by the works selected for this virtual event.

Read more