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Virtual
Art
From Illusion to Immersion
by Oliver Grau
Although many people view virtual
reality as a totally new phenomenon, it has its foundations in an unrecognized
history of immersive images. Indeed, the search for illusionary visual space
can be traced back to antiquity. In this book Oliver Grau shows how virtual
art fits into the art history of illusion and immersion. He describes the
metamorphosis of the concepts of art and the image and relates those concepts
to interactive art, interface design, agents, telepresence, and image evolution.
Grau retells art history as media history, helping us to understand the
phenomenon of virtual reality beyond the hype.
Grau shows how each epoch used the technical means available to produce
maximum illusion. He discusses frescoes such as those in the Villa dei
Misteri in Pompeii and the gardens of the Villa Livia near Primaporta,
Renaissance and Baroque illusion spaces, and panoramas, which were the
most developed form of illusion achieved through traditional methods of
painting and the mass image medium before film. Through a detailed analysis
of perhaps the most important German panorama, Anton von Werner's 1883
"The Battle of Sedan," Grau shows how immersion produced emotional
responses. He traces immersive cinema through Cinerama, Sensorama, Expanded
Cinema, 3-D, Omnimax and IMAX, and the Head Mounted Display with its military
origins. He also examines those characteristics of virtual reality that
distinguish it from earlier forms of illusionary art. His analysis draws
on the work of contemporary artists and groups ART+COM, Maurice Benayoun,
Charlotte Davies, Monika Fleischmann, Ken Goldberg, Agnes Hegedues, Eduardo
Kac, Knowbotic Research, Laurent Mignonneau, Michael Naimark, Simon Penny,
Daniela Plewe, Paul Sermon, Jeffrey Shaw, Karl Sims, Christa Sommerer,
and Wolfgang Strauss. Grau offers not just a history of illusionary space
but also a theoretical framework for analyzing its phenomenologies, functions,
and strategies throughout history and into the future.
January 2003
ISBN 0-262-07241-6
7 x 9, 360 pp., 89 illus.
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"A must on your bookshelf, if you are interested in a diachronic view of visual media and art."
-- Guy van Belle, European Photography, Vol. 24
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