Hi Dave, I saw a nice example of using moving objects and pepper's ghost at the Wellington Museum of the City and the Sea, to communicate Maori creation legends.
You can see it halfway down this page, and there is a link to a video: http://www.museumswellington.org.nz/museum-of-wellington-city-and-sea/exhibitions/ Cheers, Alexis Alexis Tindall Project Manager South Australian Museum North Terrace, Adelaide SA 5000 P: +61 (8) 8207 7497 alexis.tindall at samuseum.sa.gov.au www.samuseum.sa.gov.au This email and any attachments may contain confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient any use, disclosure or reproduction of the contents is unauthorised. If you have received this email in error please notify the sender by return email. This email and any attachments should be scanned to detect any viruses and no liability for loss or damage resulting from the use of any attached file is accepted. -----Original Message----- From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of dave patten Sent: Monday, 14 July 2014 6:03 PM To: mcn-l at mcn.edu Subject: [MCN-L] Dioramas for the 21st century Hi folks, I am investigating ways of using technology to bring dioramas (and room sets) to life (using projection mapping, peppers ghost, moving objects, 3d printing etc) and wondered if anyone is either working in this area or have come across interesting examples that they could share with me. Thanks in anticipation Dave Patten Head of New Media The Science Museum Exhibition Road London SW7 2DD Tel: 020 7942 4864 E-mail: dave.patten at nmsi.ac.uk Web: www.sciencemuseum.org.uk
