Augmented Reality Projects by Interactive Art Students - Paulo Majano Instructor
Augmented Reality Festival
October 2011
Kwantlen Polytechnic University, BC, Canada
Augmented Reality (AR) is the overlay of multimedia elements (video, images, 3D Digital imagery) over a camera view of the real world – it allows the viewer to see computer media as if it exists alongside real objects. Our Augmented Reality Festival presented the work of 14 students from the interactive Art And the Web class and a few other examples of AR. The show included images on the wall, magazines, framed art, and books that students enhanced with AR imagery visible with an iPhone, iPad, or Android phone.
Some projects in the show: Student Roxanne Charles will show a framed a black and white photo of Chief Dan George that becomes an animated video. Roxanne Charles: “The video will contrast cultural in the city with the struggle of addiction that faces many aboriginal people in the downtown eastside. There will be a layering of sound that is competing with the words of Chief Dan George as it is becoming harder to hear the voice of our ancestors in an ever growing metropolis.” Mark Stewart presented "Dissappearing CMYK" a copy of CMYK magazine "50" edition that erases itself when viewed in AR.
Featured in the Runner Newspaper
Try it yourself
How to view the AR content: Download the free Junaio app for iPhone or Android, open the App and SCAN one image at a time in the articles listed below.
The Runner Newspaper Issue 4, Vol 4 Oct 2011
Turn to page 16 for the Article about the Augmented Reality festival
Open the Junaio App and SCAN the image
Click this link to go to this issue
The Runner Newspaper Issue 5,Vol 4 Nov 2011
Turn to pages 8-9 in this issue for marker images from the AR festival
Open the Junaio App and SCAN one image at a time
Click this link to go to this Runner Issue
Augmented Reality Festival
October 2011
Kwantlen Polytechnic University, BC, Canada
Augmented Reality (AR) is the overlay of multimedia elements (video, images, 3D Digital imagery) over a camera view of the real world – it allows the viewer to see computer media as if it exists alongside real objects. Our Augmented Reality Festival presented the work of 14 students from the interactive Art And the Web class and a few other examples of AR. The show included images on the wall, magazines, framed art, and books that students enhanced with AR imagery visible with an iPhone, iPad, or Android phone.
Some projects in the show: Student Roxanne Charles will show a framed a black and white photo of Chief Dan George that becomes an animated video. Roxanne Charles: “The video will contrast cultural in the city with the struggle of addiction that faces many aboriginal people in the downtown eastside. There will be a layering of sound that is competing with the words of Chief Dan George as it is becoming harder to hear the voice of our ancestors in an ever growing metropolis.” Mark Stewart presented "Dissappearing CMYK" a copy of CMYK magazine "50" edition that erases itself when viewed in AR.
Featured in the Runner Newspaper
Try it yourself
How to view the AR content: Download the free Junaio app for iPhone or Android, open the App and SCAN one image at a time in the articles listed below.
The Runner Newspaper Issue 4, Vol 4 Oct 2011
Turn to page 16 for the Article about the Augmented Reality festival
Open the Junaio App and SCAN the image
Click this link to go to this issue
The Runner Newspaper Issue 5,Vol 4 Nov 2011
Turn to pages 8-9 in this issue for marker images from the AR festival
Open the Junaio App and SCAN one image at a time
Click this link to go to this Runner Issue
AR Festival Fall 2011 from filmnoiseVimeo on Vimeo.
Virtual Sculptures
April 2009
"Tangent" Exhibition at KPU
AR sculptures created by students in Interactive Art & the Web for the exhibition "Tangent" at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in 2009.
3D models created in Sketchup, encoded in HTML for AR, presented on iMac desktop using HitLabs Software. Viewers can select one of 12 virtual sculptures by choosing a marker, the sculpture rotates automatically or can be moved manually by the viewers.
April 2009
"Tangent" Exhibition at KPU
AR sculptures created by students in Interactive Art & the Web for the exhibition "Tangent" at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in 2009.
3D models created in Sketchup, encoded in HTML for AR, presented on iMac desktop using HitLabs Software. Viewers can select one of 12 virtual sculptures by choosing a marker, the sculpture rotates automatically or can be moved manually by the viewers.
Virtual Sculptures from filmnoiseVimeo on Vimeo.