Showing posts with label immersions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label immersions. Show all posts

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Adieu (soon) to 'King Tut' at National Geographic


At the entrance to King Tut's simulated tomb at National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie

History.com says the discovery of King Tut's tomb 100 years ago is "the greatest archeological find of all time," while Wikipedia calls it "the best-preserved pharaonic tomb ever found in the Valley of the Kings. 


And if you can't get to Cairo to see King Tut's tomb and all his worldly afterlife possessions, National Geographic has brought a semblance to you.

Inside Immersive King Tut at National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Although the presentation lacks any artifacts, the tomb story is told in pictures, maps, video and recreations in another "immersive experience," but something is better than nothing, yes? 


Yes! 

A reproduction of the Dec. 12, 1922 page from the Times of London and its explosive pictures and articles upon the discovery of King Tut's tomb, pictured at National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie
The entrance to King Tut’s tomb from a newspaper photograph at 
National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie

An enlargement of the photograph of a luncheon party on site after the tomb was discovered, pictured in the London Times, Dec. 12, 1922. ANational Geographic/Photo of a photo by Patricia Leslie


Some of the artifacts found in the King's antechamber, to help the King on the way to the afterlife. It took ten years to record all the contents. A photograph of a photograph at National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie


It was 100 years ago that the tomb of King Tut (1342 B.C.E. - c. 1323 B.C.E.) was discovered and several times since then that millions of people have seen some of his funerary pieces which have traveled the globe (including Washington, the last stop here at the National Gallery of Art, 1976-1977).


Besides National Geographic, museums around the world are celebrating the centennial of the discovery of the tomb located with about 5,400 artifacts and undisturbed by evil intruders which spells its significance, the only Egyptian pharaoh's tomb discovered mostly intact, one grave robbers had not plundered, although some contents were damaged by humidity and dry conditions. 

ANational Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie
ANational Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie
ANational Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie
ANational Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie

King Tut became pharaoh when he was only nine years old, about the same time that he married his half sister. He died mysteriously about nine years later, perhaps of gangrene, the effects of a broken leg, or was it blood poisoning or something else?


The tomb's artifacts have permitted archaeologists to examine his life, that of other pharaohs, and the lifestyles of Egyptian royalty, leading to more questions and more research. 


Biography.com says the king accomplished little in his lifetime.  (But, in death..., oh my!)


At National Georgraphic a fascinating family tree is on a wall which shows King Tutankhamun's wife was also his half sisterKing Akhenaten was the father of both. Inbreeding was common then/Photo by Patricia Leslie


The nine-foot high golden sarcophagus in King Tut's tomb held as many as eight coffins which nested one inside the other. This reproduction at National Geographic is similar in size to the actual one in Cairo/Photo by Patricia Leslie
A copy of King Tut's gold mask,  the most recognizable symbol of Ancient Egypt and weighing in at 22 or 25 pounds (depending upon your source), pictured at National Geographic/Photo by Patricia Leslie

At National Geographic all King Tut merchandise is priced at half off. Scarves, books, cups, and reproductions of period postcards are some of the products available/Photo by Patricia Leslie


The entrance to the National Geographic presentation starts in a closed "antechamber" with a pre-recorded introduction and film. Then, when the talking ends, a large door opens to reveal the beginnings of a cavernous, darkened hallway where visitors slowly wind their way on a a self-guided tour where wall displays tell the tomb's story. 


To add to the experience, rushing water sounds and funereal music fill the hallways to create a sense of underground hallowed spaces. 


Visitors have plenty of unlimited time to walk and read at  leisurely paces since large crowds were absent, at least when I was there, but more may come, the closer it gets to the ending date of February 6, 2023.


At the entrance to King Tut, National Geographic has free beautifully designed, 24-paged booklets in full color and in different languages about the tomb. The booklet informed me that a "water boy" was the actual discoverer of the tomb when during Howard Carter's sixth attempt to find King Tut, the boy made room in the sand to prop water jars upright and he found a step which eventually led to the tomb.


When I visited and descended into the tomb in 2017, no mention was made of the "water boy."


To ease navigation during the exhibition and for study of various scenes, National Geographic has available at no charge, portable, lightweight seats which guests may carry and use throughout the show.



Immersive King Tut has already traveled to many major American cities with more on the calendar. 


Cairo will "soon" exhibit the King's tomb and all its belongings when it opens its long-awaited Grand Egyptian Museum at the Giza pyramids, to be the largest museum in the world and  about five years behind schedule. 


(A note to the producers:  What I'd like to see:  Prince Harry's "Spare" as an immersive experience.)


 

What:  Beyond King Tut:  The Immersive Experience


When:  Daily through Feb. 6, 2023, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. The last tickets are sold at 4 p.m. Allow about an hour.


Where:  National Geographic Museum1145 17th Street NW, Washington, DC, 20036


Tickets:  From $12 (children, ages 5 - 12) to $20 (adults) with $4 discounts for seniors, military, students, and educators. Children under age 5 are free. Discounts for groups of 20 or more. Same day tickets are not available online but may be purchased on site, subject to availability. 


For more information: (202) 857-7700.


Metro stations:  Near Farragut West and North, McPherson Square.


patricialesli@gmail.com

 

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Extended! Immersive Van Gogh is impressive Van Gogh!

It is a starry night at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
One of the artist's self-portraits at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
A huge bust of the artist at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie

A huge bust of the artist at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience. Note changes from above as colors deepen/Photo by Patricia Leslie
A huge bust of the artist at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience covered in a likeness from one of his paintings/Photo by Patricia Leslie


I went, expecting far less and came away exceptionally surprised at the all-encompassing show where visitors seemingly float through without worries or stress. 

It's a family affair, 360 degrees of digital art and quite the introduction to classical art for the youngsters and for adults, too, who may not know as much about the artist as they thought.

Like me, for instance.  Several Van Gogh paintings on display were new to me!

Guests admire one of his vases at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience. He reportedly painted 11 vases in all/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Another vase at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
In the galleries at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie

The darkened atmosphere is relaxing. Gallery going is at your own pace. No worries about elbow bumping! 

Let's just celebrate art and have a good time, shall we?

From the first revelation at the entrance of a gigantic bust of the artist (1837-1890) (correction: which is half the size of the JFK bust at the Kennedy Center) until you exit at the shop, you are ensconced in all things Van Gogh.

His bust is covered in images of his paintings which evolve into other images while you stand in awe.

Guests may sit in the artist's Bedroom at Arles at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Immersion at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Immersion at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Immersion at the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie
At the Van Gogh Immersive Experience/Photo by Patricia Leslie


A nearby timeline on the wall tells major events of the artist's life and then it's off to the first room where copies of his works (most in the same size) hang on both sides of the hall with a three-dimensional "room" off to the side.

On an adjacent wall, copies of his sunflowers hang and allow close inspection of differences.

A large vase spins with constant color changes and renditions of the blossoms which fuse one into another. 

Flowers spring up while visitors proceed to the next gallery and more images, and there is Van Gogh's bedroom at Arles which beckons guests to come in and sit for a while.

Make a picture or two.

Sight sensations and music fill senses in a pleasurable way while surround sound echoes with Van Gogh's spoken quotations:

What would life be like if we had no courage to attempt anything? 

and

If you truly love nature, you will find beauty everywhere.

The last gallery is the "immersion" room with his works illustrated on all sides in double, triple life sizes, constantly melding into another image. 

It's like being in a Van Gogh aquarium (!), beginning with the carpeting on the floor and extending to the high ceiling spanning 20,000 square feet with comfortable beach chairs, benches, bean bags, and pillows for guests to use and move about for a better spot to think, dream, meditate, and give thanks for an artist like Van Gogh.  

At the end, for $5 more, visitors may put on virtual reality headsets and attend a computer art show of Van Gogh places.

The VR hall opens to a large shop of Van Gogh merchandise at mostly reasonable prices.  Try umbrellas, earrings ($10), brooches, t-shirts (the skeleton head will be great for Halloween), posters ($14), and lots more.

What's missing here is the present location of each original work, but we are lucky in Washington, D.C. to be able to see some of them at the Phillips Collection  and still more for free at the National Gallery of Art!

Van Gogh is not dead; he lives! At the Van Gogh Immersive Experience. Come and see!

When:  Now through Thanksgiving weekend  Feb. 26, 2023. Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m; Saturday, 9 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Sunday, 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. Closed on Tuesdays.

Where:  The Rhode Island Center - 524 Rhode Island Ave NE, Washington, DC 20002

Tickets:  A family pass for two adults and two children is $31.90. Separately, children under age 4 are admitted free and older children are $29.90; adults, $49.90; seniors, students and military, $37.90; groups of 15 or more, $44.90 each. ccc 

Masks are encouraged, however, not required.

Metro station:  Rhode Island-Brookland Station.  Take the ramp/pedestrian bridge directly from the Metro exit over Rhode Island Avenue  to land just steps from the show. (Ignore Google's directions which take you waaay off yonder and around several blocks.) 

Park for two hours free at the Bryant Street West lot, 514 Rhode Island Ave., NE, Washington, D.C. ccc.  Ph. 844-236-2011. 

Timing: Allow 60-75 minutes.

Let us go then, you and I

To see his works spread against the sky

Like the paintings on the walls

We'll enjoy van Gogh and all.

Oh, do not ask, "What is it?"

Let us go and make our visit.

Where the people come and go

To see the art of Vincent van Gogh*

 

*With apologies to T.S. Eliot

Patricialesli@gmail.com