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tv   Shift  Deutsche Welle  December 9, 2024 7:15am-7:31am CET

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the south go yes, either ship pines in limbo, the opposition party is calling for the new impeachment forward in the week. ahead and you're up to date of next shift with a look at the rise of immersive art. we'll have more news for you at the top, the next hour, and i hope you can join us the not just another day. so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand. this is the day i'm in current use events analyzed by experts. i'm critical thinking is this is with the weekdays on dw, my name is the calls back. say,
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thank you so much for joining in. welcome to don't hold bad. a lot of people do that. it's all about saying it aloud means would it be nosy bay like good, everyone talking to me. you're healthy award winning called com. so hold back. the immersive art is appearing everywhere. color for exhibition skittering digital art installations have proven extremely popular with the public. in theory, these exhibitions should allow us to fully sink into the art. so how well do they work in practice? can they turn us all into art lovers? here's one example of immersive art made by turkish, american artists for feet, an adult. but before we get into his work, let's go over the basics immersive art one. 0 one. what exactly is it immersive comes from the latin word, the mercy o, which means to plunge into many are already familiar with immersion from the game
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world in virtual reality. when executed successfully, you feel like you're right in the middle of the action. some artists are using some of the same elements, huge digital artworks, sometimes even with sound effects and smells that offer just a full sensory experience. immersive art concepts are flourishing. the international or collective team lab brook, again, this world record for it's hugely successful immersive installations. more than 2000000 visitors came to see it and just one year, not that right. take a look at their new expedition team lead borderless is less of a place. you visit in more of a place you experience the museum in tokyo, created by the collective team lab showcases digital art. instead of standing in front of the works, guest are invited to step inside them. the immersive installation bubble universe comes to life as you move around the physical experience as an expression of the artist, concept and philosophy. the
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think i think what, what people tend to perceive the world as having independent entities which exist independently share with team lead borderless. we want to create an experience to the ard works, where the world is continuous and where the continuity of the world itself is spelled as beautiful. this 3 dimensional work is made up of spheres to generate light according to movements. as a person moves closer to spirit, the bubble will shine brightly and the light will spread to the nearest. interacting with light started by other movements. as a result of the technology, viewers aren't just observers. they become contributors to the work itself the. the new, i think that
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a space with the existence of other people changes to the artwork. and that creates some sort of change for you. so that reciprocal relationship between you and the art work and other people can create an experience where people can further still have a sense of continuity. in their 2 views, studio team of artists are designing numerous of creations. it's a divers team that likes to experiment with new ways of making art. obviously it's on a google, it is a special wrist. it's uh, a uh, i can now holloway engineers, software engineers and assist young managers advocates. that's my question for you to think our reasons, defies tablet based programmers. this the use of the defense mediators, monitors, projectors, heavy, these weight about x whatevers. we try to create some things the team
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that isn't the only player in the inverse of our team. here in galleries the teacher institutions are developing numbers that are projects like these installations by japanese photographer mika. not the one. why doesn't? there's a very few to some of the people the asking me today more than ever we, we, we, we're kind of leads hearing a certain way when it comes to art. so we don't want to make that effort of contemplation of dialogue. and so with the traditional article it, it's up to us to go to the artwork. well, in this kind of humor, suspect, the goal, it's the artwork that comes to us that immersed us. the 2nd reason which is in more recent reason, i would say it's, it's, it's social media. these words are highly instead brown level and,
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and also there's a 3rd ways into that, which is also contextual. i think it's cool that because we were so deprived of any santorial experience of real life experience, ever fig happened on his screen. it's all flat. so i think we all needed to get out to experience with a full body. i'm a fan of most of our triggers, all of your senses, which can be exhilarating and an error when it's easy to get stuck staring at your phone. and the striking installations are basically predestined for social media, speaking of which does it cheap in the art when it feels like everyone on instagram has a picture of it. here's archer, reader, michael conner. see a lot of positives about it. and you know, this idea of like taking a picture and putting yourself in a way of expressing your relationship with that are. but there are critical voices to exhibitions that take classic paintings by famous artists and turn them into huge video installations are marketed as immersive experiences and solar installations like those by team lab,
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which feature newly created immersive works. do they both count as are what some practice? some of these experiences are definitive. we are. there is no question that it's made by an artist for the purposes of retros stick expression. and then thinking this medium and a new way. certainly when you're talking about something that's being offered as a commercial experience derived from an older or artist work calling that are was, would be a bit more controversial. i mean, this certainly has been treated colors art. can this be considered new art form your copy? this immersive exhibition on the life of free to color displeased almost all of the mexican painters works in a way we've never been displayed before. moving larger than life and accompanied by traditional music. the visitors to the exhibition in berlin were impressed that the lovely thing about them must have experience. you just, you just arrived. but where is you might go to a gallery and see one picture. my head here, you get
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a taste of of so many of it was so you see that that the whole catalogue of her would be picnic because the technology, the sound, and it was also permit us to get a film worked really well. and it said with high performance projectors bring 3 to colors, paintings to life on walls, 5 and a half meters tall. the story for light is told in vivid detail, the quotes are tellos homewards. taken from letters and diaries for family background. her relationship to her husband, the mexican revolution, and her health issues, tallow explorer, and all of these topics to her are in places. but i'm, i'm impressed by her life in this colorful world. do you feel like you're right in the middle of it and experiencing the time, the way the artist did? because the thoughts was lacking clips have other immersive expeditions. also try to give guess the feeling that they're right in the middle of the work to readers.
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if use popular works for renaissance masters, crowd monet's, colorful garden paintings, gustaf crimps golden age works, and the vincent then goes, iconic paintings. immersive exhibitions can run in parallel in different locations . but not everyone is so enthusiastic about these new forms of presenting and re packaging, or there's no creation. they just use a name as a label, just to attract people for something that is entirely fee, that also this regards in this respect, the artwork of this painters. they were not supposed to be immersive. obviously we can't know which frida kahlo would have thought about these immersive expeditions, but some living artists have no qualms about them. in fact, british painter david hockney worked on turning his own iconic paintings into wall projections for this immersive showcase. no less striking, but far more abstract is work by artist receipt and at all. his use of artificial
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intelligence has made him a pioneer in the field of media art. the beauty of data is central to the work of media artist received an adult. his heart is exhibited in the world, most influential museums. it's also displayed on building decides and, and public spaces by starts imagining data is a pigment. data for me is not the number. data is a form of memory, and this memory can take any shape and form since 2016 or speak an adult has been using algorithms to create monumental data sculptures, constantly changing points, think nature, i get this that it gives the fluid dynamics that i love. water and, and to move with the life. and i believe that if they paint, yvonne de data becomes a pigment. it's one drive. if you look a water, always safe. shifting at the root economic form in davos adults and verse of artwork. visualize the biodiversity of the amazon rain forest. i know my cup us. it
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is a human. i will never remember one me with an image of nature. i will never remember how familiar with the levels of amazon. yeah. but the, using a allows me to go beyond my comments, whether it's the biodiversity, the amazon brain, waves or observations collected by the us based agency, nasa. the data for the kind of goals or is always chosen with the installation site in mind. for example, this project was created using 45 terabytes of data from the los angeles philharmonic digital archive. it was projected onto the exterior of the concert hall. immerse of art is also a topic in science. one of the pioneers of so called newest attics is to the next salmon from johns hopkins university school of medicine in the united states. her research focuses on how our impacts our brain. and she has
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a scientific explanation for all of the hype around the verse of art. i feel like immersive art so much because they make us feel good. it brings to the forefront all of the sensory systems that we have been wired for and often don't use in our daily lives. so it's ideal being able to touch to smell, to feel, to see, to use the vibration of sound and music to really and live in our bodies. and our brains, sensory experiences to deep snaps. which connect different areas of the brain and form a new new ronald structure to be small changes influence how we feel, think and behave for learning more and more that our well being our flourishing, our physical health and our role is highly influenced by the fact that we are wired for the parts and for a long time,
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i think we have set that aside and thought that the arts were nice to have a luxury, something that you do when you have time. and now what we're finding is that they're as important as nutrition. good, sleep, and exercise. the parts are absolutely essential to our will be. so do you hate it or love it? what's your take on immersive expeditions? i think they can be a great way to learn more about art and artist. yes, there's an element of entertainment to them, but maybe that's not such a bad thing. do you think immersive art is worth type? let us know. take care and see you next time. the eco for time saving indigenous medicinal plans from
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extinction, jeanette to kyra key on those goals. these plump have such a powerful effect that they can even fight to malaria. a success story full of the agents. eco africa. next on dw, most people are going to choose big business. it is what it is. this week we're going to talk about freak influence as making big money. and the question is, do they have a big responsibility to society? i don't think that the person that comes to my mind when i'm doing things right. these people say it is your duty, your own civic responsibility to participate in social discourse. the demographics tied to the 77 percent and 60 minutes on d. w. get ready for an exciting auburn toyota to look surprised. hi,
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irish. and i'm ready to dive into the hands of human to the q one. you have you have a one, the front porch response and the unexpected side to side. the it takes resilience and cooperation to tackle the challenges of the modem. 12, whether through the technology practitioner, knowledge or share determination. people off for the impulse to it's a that's a most sustainable future. one that's better for everyone. i'm principal in san lagos, nigeria, chris who have you with us, and here's what's coming up. protecting disabled communities from both on
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