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  • The Fort of the Hooded Cobra, Ahhichatragarh, is located at Nagaur, 135 km northeast of Jodhpur. A rich history and distinctive Rajput-Mughal architecture give it a special importance among India's heritage sites. Eye of Nagaur consists of twenty
  • PLACE-Turkey (YER-Türkiye) takes participants on an embodied journey through a virtual landscape of panoramic photographic scenes and cinematic events. It utilizes the interaction paradigm first developed in PLACE-a user’s manual (1995), which is a
  • The WILD Panoramic Navigator is a novel, interactive augmented-reality multimedia information terminal derived from the original Panoramic Navigator (1997). It provides a means for the general public to intuitively and interactively orient
  • The CMC Linear Navigator was commissioned for the entrance foyer of the Daniel Libeskind–designed City University of Hong Kong Creative Media Centre (CMC). In this iteration of the ‘linear navigator’ concept first developed for the Net.Art Browser
  • Pure Land immerses visitors in the quintessential heritage of Dunhuang's Buddhist grotto temples, which constitute an art treasury abounding with murals, statues and architectural monuments. This UNESCO World Heritage SITE, also known as the Caves
  • Ecloud WWI
    ECLOUD WWI is an interactive spatial browser for the exploration of cultural data collected in the Europeana 1914–1918 archive. Presented in 3-D on a custom-designed 9 m by 3 m projection screen, the installation contains more than 40,000 images of
  • Pure Land AR employs iPad screens that visitors use as mobile viewing devices to explore the magnificent Buddhist wall paintings inside Cave 220, a cave dated to early Tang, from the Mogao Grottoes at Dunhuang in Gansu province, China. It is an
  • Fall Again, Fall Better is an installation constituted by two elements: a projection screen or a large LCD monitor, displaying computer-generated content in anaglyphic red/green 3-D, and the user interface, which is a handle from an urban subway
  • The handscroll Pacifying the South China Sea chronicles the suppression of piracy by the forces of the Jiaqing Emperor (r. 1796–1820). The scroll illustrates the events of the period in twenty different scenes, each abundant with detail depicting
  • The source material for this interactive installation is the Pacifying the South China Sea handscroll, painted by an anonymous Qing painter almost two hundred years ago. The scroll chronicles the story of how the forces of the Jiaqing Emperor