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Whoa, didn't realise our Spectrum of Life interactive was so influential! Some background info on that here: http://www.exhibitresearch.com/cms/?q=node/26/
If I can toss in another bit of shameless self promotion, the Shackleton installation we did around the same time also tends to get talked about a lot I think... http://www.exhibitresearch.com/cms/?q=shackleton
Meanwhile, here in London, a few that people talk about:
- Interactive table at Churchill Museum/Cabinet War Rooms, done by Casson Mann I think. Done way back in 2005, to many the table that started it all...
- The big LED visitor-feedback installation in Science Museum, done even earlier, also I think by Casson Mann
- One for the future maybe: the biometric interactive at Wellcome Collection by Ico Design/Chris O'Shea: http://www.chrisoshea.org/wellcome-biometric
kevin
On 13 Jan 2011, at 16:31, Brewster Buttfield wrote:
> ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
> Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related institutions.
> *****************************************************************************
>
> Eugene
>
> I would consider the use of digital technology in the "Spectrum of Life" at the
> American Museum of Natural History to be influential. This dramatic and visually
> appealing exhibit works because of the computer stations that the visitors uses
> for identification of species. I often reference it when discussing the
> successful use of technology in museums. It is certainly influential in the
> application of technology. Whether it is influential in the broader exhibition
> field outside of technology is another question.
>
> Brewster
>
> Brewster Buttfield
> Prospect Design
> 424 Fore Street
> Portland, Maine 04101
> 207-749-7400
> [log in to unmask]
> www.prospectdesign.me
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>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Eugene Dillenburg <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Sent: Thu, January 13, 2011 10:56:32 AM
> Subject: [ISEN-ASTC-L] Influential uses of digital technology in exhibits?
>
> ISEN-ASTC-L is a service of the Association of Science-Technology Centers
> Incorporated, a worldwide network of science museums and related institutions.
> *****************************************************************************
>
> Please excuse any cross-postings.
>
> I started teaching my Exhibits class this week and, as always, I gave the
> students a brief history of exhibits, borrowing heavily from Marjorie
> Schwarzer's chapter on "Twelve Influential Exhibits" in the AAM centennial
> book. She lists Carl Akeley's dioramas, the coal mine at MSI, the Holocaust
> Museum, and others as exhibits that have had a broad impact on the field at
> large.
>
> During the discussion afterward, one student asked if there were any
> technology-based exhibits that were also considered influential. I thought of
> Science on a Sphere, which is popping up in several science centers, and the
> AMNH biodiversity hall which has a computerized ID system that has received a
> lot of attention. But for the most part, no, and I came up with three reasons:
>
> 1) Digital technology simply hasn't been around long enough to for any
> individual application to impact the field in the same way that the
> Exploratorium model or Mathematica have;
>
> 2) Digital technology changes so rapidly that, even if there was something with
> the potential to create such an impact, it would be out of date in a few years;
> and
>
> 3) Exhibits have such long lead times, and tight budgets, that they cannot
> easily incorporate cutting-edge technology. (I suppose that's a summary of
> points 1 & 2).
>
> However, I have been wrong before, so I thought I'd put the question out there:
> have there been any exhibits whose use of digital technology has had a wide
> influence on the exhibit field?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Eugene Dillenburg
> Exhibit Developer, Science Museum of Minnesota
> Assistant Professor and "Scholar," Michigan State University
>
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