Essays about: "Participatory Public Art"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 12 essays containing the words Participatory Public Art.
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1. Rock Art in Technicolour Exploring Augmented Reality as an Accessibility Tool for Rock Art in Tanum World Heritage
University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Institutionen för kulturvårdAbstract : This thesis explores the impact of implementing Augmented Reality (AR) technology in Tanum World heritage from the perspective of access to heritage and the value of digital heritage. Sweden has some of the best-preserved Bronze Age rock art worldwide, with more than 20,000 rock art sites around the country. READ MORE
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2. Snösätra in change - A design proposal for when an industrial graffiti landscape encounters a nature reserve
University essay from Lunds universitet/Institutionen för arkitektur och byggd miljöAbstract : In the mid 2010s, a group of graffiti artist asked for permission to paint the walls of an old industrial area outside of the suburb Rågsved in Stockholm. Between two huge rocks, near an overgrown lake, under a powerline in a lush nature area a non profit, public, free and informal art gallery established. READ MORE
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3. Pokémon GO and the city : How Pokémon GO players in Uppsala use, experience and connect to the city
University essay from Stockholms universitet/Kulturgeografiska institutionenAbstract : Pokémon GO hit the world with a bang in the summer of 2016 and has since then set new records regarding revenue on multiple occasions. It has been researched extensively, although first and foremost from a HCI (human-computer interactions) and healthcare/public health perspective. READ MORE
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4. The Stories Need to be Told : The politics of visibility/invisibility: Museum representations and participation of migrants, refugees, and ethnic minorities
University essay from Linköpings universitet/REMESO - Institutet för forskning om migration, etnicitet och samhälleAbstract : International migration and the refugee crisis have sparked a number of debates within the public policy circle. This issue also has profound social and cultural implications, even in the museum sector. READ MORE
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5. Stolpersteine: resources for development and social change? A case study in Vienna
University essay from Malmö universitet/Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS)Abstract : The Stolpersteine memorial art project commemorates individual Holocaust victims by placing small brass plates outside the last known place they freely lived or worked. To date around 70,000 of these ‘stones’ have been laid across 24 countries, making it the largest decentralised monument in the world. READ MORE