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Merit Award
Detroit Institute of Arts Interactive Exhibits
Location
Detroit
Client
Detroit Institute of Arts
Design
Pentagram
Design Team
Lisa Strausfeld (principal in charge), Nina Boesch, Jiae Kim, Kate Wolf
Consultants
Mark Van S. Photography (videographer), Francis Oh (video editor), Scott Lehrer Sound Design Ltd. (sound designer), Anne Ferril (food production),
Richard Ellis (food styling), TacTable LLC (IR software development),
ArtGuild (kiosk casework design), Detroit Institute of Arts (content)
Fabrication
Art Guild (casework), TacTable LLC (interactive software/hardware)
Photos
Peter Mauss/Esto Photographics
Founded in 1885, the Detroit Institute of Arts recently underwent a $158
million renovation that took more than six years to complete and added
58,000 sq. ft. to the institution’s already impressive 600,000 sq. ft.
Like many art galleries, DIA wants to attract new generations of visitors to
view and enjoy its treasures. As part of the renovation, designers worked
closely with the museum’s education department to create a suite of
interactive interpretive installations that help make the permanent
collection more accessible to visitors through the use of technology. The
installations include interactive kiosks, video projections, and immersive
multimedia experiences.
For museums, book display poses a difficult accessibility challenge: how can
you allow visitors to interact with the often fragile volumes? Pentagram
designed three interactive, rear-projection digital book kiosks that allow
visitors to “flip” through the pages of the Egyptian Book of the Dead, a
16th century Book of Hours, and Artistic Houses, a rare picture book of
famous home interiors dating from 1883. The kiosks also provide translations
and interpretive information about the books.
Decorative art galleries can often seem lifeless and staid to museum
visitors. In an effort to bring DIA’s collection of 18th century French
porcelain and silver to life, Pentagram created an interactive exhibit
called “The Art of Dining.” Through an elaborate overhead video projection,
visitors sit at a “dining table” onto which is projected an aristocratic
dinner service. The visitors feel they are participating as three courses of
historically accurate food are “served” using porcelain and silver pieces
from the collection.
“Antiquities Silhouette” is a 3-minute animated film that brings the ritual
of Roman wine drinking to life. Projected on a wall of the DIA’s Antiquities
Gallery, the film depicts the mixing and serving of wine while it highlights
the vessels on display and the purposes behind their various shapes. Other
installations include “The Art of African Masquerade,” a life-sized,
rear-projected film; “Dynamic Captions,” a series of changing interactive
captions in the Modern galleries; and an immersive sound installation in the
Kanzler Room, an 18th century drawing room.
Jury Comment
“An art museum’s use of technology brings historic objects to life. Gallery wall decoration based on ancient fresco fragment provides context for understanding this artwork.”
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