Arts and Culture
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62 min
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Sarah Ellis, Royal Shakespeare Company; Luke Ritchie, Philharmonia Orchestra; and Matthew Tarr, American Museum of Natural History, speak about VR, AR, and MR at the 2018 Tessitura Learning & Community Conference
Crossing Barriers to Innovate Experiences in Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality

Director of Digital Development, Royal Shakespeare Company

Head of Digital Innovation & Partnerships, Philharmonia Orchestra

Director of Digital Architecture, American Museum of Natural History
Crossing Barriers to Innovate Experiences in Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality
62 min
The new wave of immersive experiences is here.
“Crossing Barriers to Innovate Experiences in Virtual, Augmented, and Mixed Reality” features speakers from three organizations who are working with the new media formats of VR, AR, and MR. The three speakers share stories of projects and offer strategic thoughts about the opportunity to work iteratively and collaboratively to deliver heightened emotional experiences using this developing technology.
“There are two paths to obscurity: one is sitting by while the world changes, while the other is by changing so much that the world no longer recognizes you.”
— Matt Tarr
Sarah Ellis of the Royal Shakespeare Company discusses the RSC's augmented-reality production of Shakespeare's Tempest, the world's first live motion-capture performance.
Luke Ritchie of the Philharmonia Orchestra surveys ventures from the Re-Rite (a re-imagination of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring in 2010) to the Universe of Sound in 2012 to the Virtual Orchestra, their first foray into 3D virtual reality.

Image courtesy of the Philharmonia Orchestra
Matt Tarr offers his insights on various initiatives at the American Museum of Natural History, from the MicroRangers virtual board game to a HoloLens that lets users control a 3D shark with their voices. He emphasizes the need to evaluate how any potential technological effort would affect their team’s work, the visitor’s expectations, and the art of exhibition design.
“We are passing the baton of innovation to each other.”
— Sarah Ellis

Image courtesy of the American Museum of Natural History
Watch the full talk above.

Sarah Ellis
Director of Digital Development
Royal Shakespeare Company

Luke Ritchie
Head of Digital Innovation & Partnerships
Philharmonia Orchestra

Matthew Tarr
Director of Digital Architecture
American Museum of Natural History
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Arts & Culture
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