Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models

Museums have been increasingly investing in their digital presence. This became more pressing during the COVID-19 pandemic since heritage institutions had, on the one hand, to temporarily close their doors to visitors while, on the other, find ways to communicate their collections to the public. Vir...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cardozo Thiago Minete, Papadopoulos Costas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2021-06-01
Series:Open Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0147
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spelling doaj-4b1713031a9f42eb90e6e1837275612c2021-10-03T07:42:41ZengDe GruyterOpen Archaeology2300-65602021-06-017151953910.1515/opar-2020-0147Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D ModelsCardozo Thiago Minete0Papadopoulos Costas1Instituto Oi Futuro, Rio de Janeiro, BrazilFaculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Department of Literature & Art, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The NetherlandsMuseums have been increasingly investing in their digital presence. This became more pressing during the COVID-19 pandemic since heritage institutions had, on the one hand, to temporarily close their doors to visitors while, on the other, find ways to communicate their collections to the public. Virtual tours, revamped websites, and 3D models of cultural artefacts were only a few of the means that museums devised to create alternative ways of digital engagement and counteract the physical and social distancing measures. Although 3D models and collections provide novel ways to interact, visualise, and comprehend the materiality and sensoriality of physical objects, their mediation in digital forms misses essential elements that contribute to (virtual) visitor/user experience. This article explores three-dimensional digitisations of museum artefacts, particularly problematising their aura and authenticity in comparison to their physical counterparts. Building on several studies that have problematised these two concepts, this article establishes an exploratory framework aimed at evaluating the experience of aura and authenticity in 3D digitisations. This exploration allowed us to conclude that even though some aspects of aura and authenticity are intrinsically related to the physicality and materiality of the original, 3D models can still manifest aura and authenticity, as long as a series of parameters, including multimodal contextualisation, interactivity, and affective experiences are facilitated.https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0147auraauthenticity3d modelscultural heritageremediationtechnological mediationsurveyqualitative interviews
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cardozo Thiago Minete
Papadopoulos Costas
spellingShingle Cardozo Thiago Minete
Papadopoulos Costas
Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
Open Archaeology
aura
authenticity
3d models
cultural heritage
remediation
technological mediation
survey
qualitative interviews
author_facet Cardozo Thiago Minete
Papadopoulos Costas
author_sort Cardozo Thiago Minete
title Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
title_short Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
title_full Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
title_fullStr Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
title_full_unstemmed Heritage Artefacts in the COVID-19 Era: The Aura and Authenticity of 3D Models
title_sort heritage artefacts in the covid-19 era: the aura and authenticity of 3d models
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Archaeology
issn 2300-6560
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Museums have been increasingly investing in their digital presence. This became more pressing during the COVID-19 pandemic since heritage institutions had, on the one hand, to temporarily close their doors to visitors while, on the other, find ways to communicate their collections to the public. Virtual tours, revamped websites, and 3D models of cultural artefacts were only a few of the means that museums devised to create alternative ways of digital engagement and counteract the physical and social distancing measures. Although 3D models and collections provide novel ways to interact, visualise, and comprehend the materiality and sensoriality of physical objects, their mediation in digital forms misses essential elements that contribute to (virtual) visitor/user experience. This article explores three-dimensional digitisations of museum artefacts, particularly problematising their aura and authenticity in comparison to their physical counterparts. Building on several studies that have problematised these two concepts, this article establishes an exploratory framework aimed at evaluating the experience of aura and authenticity in 3D digitisations. This exploration allowed us to conclude that even though some aspects of aura and authenticity are intrinsically related to the physicality and materiality of the original, 3D models can still manifest aura and authenticity, as long as a series of parameters, including multimodal contextualisation, interactivity, and affective experiences are facilitated.
topic aura
authenticity
3d models
cultural heritage
remediation
technological mediation
survey
qualitative interviews
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0147
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