building virtual museum exhibitions
DESCRIPTION
Building Virtual Museum Exhibitions. ARCO Project Partners. The University of Sussex (UK) The Sussex Archaeological Society (UK) The Poznan University of Economics (Poland) Commissariat a l’Energie Atomique (France) Giunti Gruppo Editoriale (Italy) University of Bath (UK) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Building Virtual Museum Exhibitions
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Project Partners
The University of Sussex (UK)
The Sussex Archaeological Society (UK)
The Poznan University of Economics (Poland)
Commissariat a l’Energie Atomique (France)
Giunti Gruppo Editoriale (Italy)
University of Bath (UK)
Victoria and Albert Museum (UK)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO-Team @ Museum Association Conference, Brighton
• ARCO team on Stand 70o Martin White (UoS)—ARCO Project Managero Krzysztof Walczak (PUE)—Database and Content Managemento Manjula Patel (UKOLN)—Heritage Metadatao Patrick Sayd (CEA-LIST)—Digitisationo Rafal Wojciechowski (PUE, UoS)—Virtual and Augmented Realityo Miroslaw Stawniak (PUE)—Database and Content Managemento John Manley (Sussex Past)—Small Museum Perspectiveo James Stevenson (VAM)—Large Museum Perspectiveo Fabrizio Giorgini (GIUNTI)—Business Modelso Nicholaos Mourkoussis (UoS)—Metadata and XML Schemaso Joe Darcy (UoS)—3D Modelling of Museum Artefacts
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Presentation Outline
• ARCO Project Introduction – Martin White (UoS)o Tools for building virtual museum exhibitions
• ARCO Technology Overview – Manjula Patel (UKOLN)o Creating and Manipulating 3D Models
o Managing Cultural Object Database
o Presentation of Cultural Objects using Virtual and Augmented Reality
• Benefits for Small Museums – John Manley (SussexPast)
• Benefits for Large Museums – James Stevenson (VAM)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Background
• ARCO started in October 2001 as a three year RTD projecto 1 year left to run, on schedule to finish September 2004
• Seven partners including two museum pilot sites from 4 European countries
o United Kingdom, France, Poland, Italy
• Co-funded by the EC under the 5FP (IST)o Total investment is 2.8M Euro. 2.0M Euro from the EC
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Status
• Progress so far:o 4 prototype systems and components completed, various configurations
demonstrated at: COMDEX Fall 2002, Las Vegas EVA 2003 Florence and London Example 4th prototype components are exhibiting on stand 70 Two Museum User Trials, third in October at Sussex Past
o Large dissemination activity: Vision, Video and Graphics, UK Visualisation, Imaging and Image Processing, Spain Dublin Core, USA
• Immediate Future Developments:o Final 12 months of project for more detailed system integration, assessment and
evaluation, dissemination activitieso Technology Implementation Plan
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Technology Overview
ARCO Project goals
Prototype systems and components
Digitisation of artefacts
3D modelling and refinement
Storing and managing digitised objects
ARCO data model
Metadata in ARCO
Visualisation of digitised artefacts
Manjula Patel (UKOLN, University of Bath)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Goals of the ARCO Project
• Develop innovative technology and expertise to help museums Create, Manipulate, Manage and Present cultural objects in virtual exhibitions both within museums and over the Web
• Why?o To allow museums to have an online (3D) presence
o To enable interaction with digital representations of collections
• How? By building a set of tools and processes from digitisation to visualisation:o Digital capture of artefacts, 3D modelling and refinement, Database and
content management, Visualisation in virtual or augmented reality environments
o Interoperability i.e. an Open Architecture XML Data Exchange between tools and other systems Internet, Web, graphics and metadata standards
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Prototype Systems and Components
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Create: Digitise Artefacts with the Object Modeller
• Method of modelling depends on features of the objects
o Objects with simple geometry are modelled with modified 3ds max or Maya
• For complex models we use a custom built stereo digital camera system:
o Object geometry and textures are extracted from sequences of stereo pictures and merged to produce a 3D textured model
o Portable in order to gain access to fragile artefacts
o Ease of use for museum staff who are not experts in 3D measurement
o Result should be an accurate 3D model of the artefact in terms of shape, texture and resolution
o Automated stereo reconstruction as far as possible
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
• A tool for interactive model refinement and rendering
• Creation of simple models and refinement of digitised models o smoothing the object geometry
o reducing polygon count for Internet based rendering
o re-applying lighting
o repairing missing parts
• Database connectivityo search and browse objects
o import and export models
(including models generated by
other methods,
e.g. Mechanical scanning,
Laser scanning)
Manipulate: 3D Modelling and Refinement
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Media Objects from Creation & Manipulation Stages
Sample media objects representing cultural objects in the database:
• Images from the photogrammetry process
• VRML models exported from model refinement
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Manage: Content Management Application
• All ARCO data is stored in a database for consistency
• Museums do not manage the database directly, but through a Content Management Application (ACMA)
• ACMA provides several managers for ease of data manipulation, e.g.
o Cultural objects
o X-VRML templates
o Virtual exhibitions
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Data Model
Media Object
+is included
+includes
Cultural Object
Acquired Object
<<subclass>>
+belongs to
+contains
Refined Object
<<subclass>>
+belongs to
+contains
<<refines>>
<<refines>>
Cultural Object: descriptive curatorial metadata, surrogate for the physical artefact
Acquired Object: digital representation of the physical artefact
Refined Object: acquired (or refined) object which has been modified
Media Object: individual object which makes up a digital representation (3D model, texture maps, description etc.)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Interoperability: Metadata for Digital Artefacts
• AMS –ARCO Metadata Schema, is a vocabulary for describing processes from digitisation to visualisation:
o Resource discovery metadata (DCMES)
o Descriptive curatorial metadata (mda SPECTRUM)
o Technical metadata (preservation)
o Themed metadata (intelligence, effort report)
o ARCO specific elements
• Interoperabilityo Data exchange between ARCO components
o Cross domain and compatibility with museum best practice
• Implemented with XML Schemas
AMS Metadata Editor
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Presentation: Augmented Reality Interfaces
• Visualisation of ARCO media objects from the database o VRML models, metadata,
images, virtual exhibitions
• Three visualisation interfaces, same database contentso Remote Web Interface
(search, browse)
o Local Museum touch-screen (search, browse)
o Local Augmented Reality environment (interact)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Virtual Museum Exhibitions and Galleries
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Benefits for Small Museums
Sussex Archaeology SocietySix regional museums in Sussex
with some 500,000 objects
John Manley (Sussex Past)
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Small Museum Attributes
• Some attributes of small museums…
o They are in the majority
o Often no dedicated ICT staff
o Very often no professional photographic skills
o They are not well-funded
o But they are cherished, rooted in their localities, and aspire to do their best
o They strive to achieve national standards
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Incarcerating Objects
• The small museum as a prison …
o Objects in them once had real lives and, for example, were meant to be
handled, or worn, or drunk from, or contained something, or displayed on
walls etc, often in the immediate locality
o We remove them from those local contexts and then lock them in glass
display cases
o We can no longer explore their physicality in the round
o And then the museum curator tells us what’s important about the object
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Liberating Objects
• ARCO system as liberator …
o ARCO can display, remotely or in-gallery, objects in the round
o Can link objects with other objects and local places where they were
found
o Offers different visual perspectives of an object which can provoke novel
opinions from the viewer, avoiding reliance on the curator
o Enhances the sensual experience of the physicality of real objects
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
ARCO Benefits for Small Museums
• ARCO and small museums…
o ARCO provides interactivity, and intelligent, non-passive artefacts
o Liberates them from the glass case and curators’ labels
o Decreases the psychological distance between object and viewer
o Moves a step closer to allowing objects to be experienced as real things,
once used by local people in their own localities
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
James Stevenson (VAM)
Victoria and Albert MuseumA large national museum
with some 4 million objects
Benefits for Large Museums
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Object base
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Why we make images
• Publications• Catalogues• Collections management• Web site• Education
– In the museum– On the web
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Education
• DCMS targets and objectives• All funding bodies have similar targets• Improve access• Social inclusion
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
How do you describe an object?
• Words, text• Objects are 3D• They have a front and back• Top and bottom• They have mass and volume
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Photographer: Pip Barnard
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Photographer: Pip Barnard
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Photographer: Pip Barnard
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
How we are doing this?
• Quick time movies• Large volume of content on the web site• Panoramas of galleries• Virtual spaces
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
What 3D models can do
• Add new ways of seeing• Give a greater degree of spatial awareness• Allow comparison of volume and mass• Be placed in virtual spaces• Help create the virtual museum
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Issues
• Difficult to achieve• Expensive• Complex• New set of skills• Studio or workshop restricted
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Tools
• Easy to use• Very simple software• Content management• Link to museums collections management• Simple model refinement• Simple insertion into web pages and virtual galleries
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Museum User Roles
• Create test situations• Access to museum content• Test developments by technical partners• Evaluate results• Encourage use by other museums
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Museum Association Conference – Brighton – 6-7th October 2003
Conclusions
ARCO is developing an open architecture that integratesstate-of-the-art with ARCO specific technologies to enable museums to build virtual exhibitions– Digitisation and modelling of 3D museum artefacts (OM)
– Refinement and creation of the 3D virtual museum artefacts (MR)
– Object relational database and content management (ACMA)
– Visualisation of museum exhibits in virtual environments (ARIF)
– Integrated through XML technologies (X-VRML, AMS, XDE)
ARCO tools are end user driven through museum pilot sites being closely integrated into the design process
Visit us at the ARCO website:– http://www.arco-web.org/
– Stand 70