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Home > News & Events > Newsletters >

Newsletter 2009

Vol. 10, n. 1 - February 2009

Chair's Report
Philip Earenfight
New CHAPS Program
Faculty News
Sydney Leon Jacobs Lecture
Alumni News
Graduate Student News

Visual Resources
Summer Programs
Undergraduate Awards
CAA Reunion 2008
Rutgers Day
Feminist Conference

The past year has been a challenging one for the Visual Resources Collection. There have been vexing budget cuts but also great opportunities and exciting new ventures.

Most importantly, the university has licensed ARTstor. All fall semester, the VRC staff has been hard at work preparing the department collection of approximately 120,000 images to migrate from Luna Insight to ARTstor. The department images will be available alongside the vast holdings of ARTstor. Faculty and students will be able to search both external and internal collections simultaneously.

It is tempting to think of virtual worlds as an emerging media. Virtual worlds offer new ways to create and explore art. Some of our most treasured monuments have been reconstructed in “Second Life”, the most popular of the virtual worlds. These include the Sistine Chapel, San Francesco in Assisi, Saint Catherine at Mount Sinai, the city of Rome, Islamic, Christian and Jewish structures in Jerusalem, Sultan Ahmet Mosque in Istanbul, the Forbidden City in Beijing, and a virtual recreation of the entire old masters wing of the Dresden Gemaldegalerie. Unfortunately these manifestations can be fleeting. Some monuments such as the Crystal Palace and a three-dimensional Van Gogh exhibit already have been removed.

Students Visiting Icon Gallery at St Catherine Monastery
Student Avatars Visiting Icon Gallery at virtual St. Catherine Monastery in Preparation for Exhibition

To think of the virtual worlds only as new media misses the point and limits the educational opportunities. These architectural monuments are more than three-dimensional showpieces. An individual’s “avatar” can visit these places, move around the space, interact with people there, and even virtually use the buildings for their original purpose. Many of the staff in the Visual Resources Collection, along with members of our Second Life “Art History” group, have been thinking about, and discussing these issues. We have been offered the opportunity to explore the issues in a virtual exhibition that will open in the Hall of Appearance in Rieul in Second Life at the end of January. [The exhibition building belongs to the Play as Being group, an initiative of the Kira Institute (http://www.kira.org)]. The exhibition will be called “Art and the Sacred in the Virtual World”. On one hand the exhibition will be a virtual catalog of many of these monuments, offering one convenient entry point. The exhibition will compare the second life constructions with the real life counterparts. But what happens when many of the real life barriers of exhibiting architecture are removed? So far real life architectural exhibitions have been limited to photos, plans, drawings, models and maybe architectural components. What if one could teleport to the actual building as part of the exhibit, and then return, and then to another building, and so on? How does this add to our experience? Can we begin to think about comparative spaces? How do the spaces relate to real life counterparts? How does space relate to the functioning of the building in the virtual world?

Visit the exhibition website at

http://sacredartexhibition.wordpress.com/

 


The Art Library

Department of Art History
Voorhees Hall
71 Hamilton Street
New Brunswick, NJ 08901
Tel: 732-932-7041
Fax: 732-932-1261

Catherine Puglisi, Chairperson

Erik Thunø , Undergraduate Director

Susan Sidlauskas, Graduate Program Director

Cathy Pizzi, Department Administrator

Geralyn Colvil, Student Coordinator







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Last Updated: 02/26/2009