Detroit Institute of Arts Interactive Installations
Pentagram Design, New York, New York, 2007
Description
Pentagram worked with the Detroit Institute of Arts on new ways to present its permanent collections by using interactive kiosks, video projections and immersive installations.
Books are traditionally displayed under glass, opened to a specific page—a necessary concession to conservation that poses a challenge to accessibility. Three interactive rear-projection digital book kiosks were created, which not only allow viewers to “flip” through the pages of a book but also provide translations and explanatory information. Represented in this innovative format were an Egyptian Book of the Dead, a 16th-century Book of Hours and Artistic Houses, a rare picture book of famous interiors such as the Vanderbilt House and Louis C. Tiffany’s apartment.
Decorative art galleries often seem lifeless and staid, so the designers created The Art of Dining to bring DIA’s collection of 18th-century French porcelain and silver to life. Through an elaborate overhead video projection, visitors sit at a table onto which an aristocratic dinner service is projected. Three courses of historically accurate food are served using the porcelain and silver from the collection on display within the gallery itself.
Antiquities Silhouette is a three-minute animated film that brings to life the ritual of Roman wine drinking. Projected on a wall, the film depicts the mixing and serving of wine while it highlights the vessels on display in the gallery and the purpose behind their various shapes.
Credits
- Design firm
- Pentagram Design
- Creative director
- Lisa Strausfeld
- Designers
- Nina Boesch, Jiae Kim, Kate Wolf
- Producer
- Kate Wolf
- Developer
- Nina Boesch
- Videographer
- Mark van S. Studio
- Video editor
- Francis Oh
- Sound design
- Scott Lehrer Sound Design
- Food production
- Anne Ferril
- Food stylist
- Richard Ellis
- Software development
- TacTable
- Exhibition designer
- ArtGuild (kiosk)
- Client
- Detroit Institute of Arts