This Interactive Virtual Museum Looks 3D but Is Actually Flat

This Interactive Virtual Museum Looks 3D but Is Actually Flat


Making 2D images look 3D is no easy task and is even harder when the viewer can actually interact with it. But this is not impossible for Roy Rodenhaeuser, Creative Technologist and Founder of Canvastique3D – a digital productivity tool that “extends physical creative workflows by enabling real-time previews of handmade designs on 3D models.” You might remember its cool holographic projection that allows you to switch colors and fabrics of clothes and furniture. 

Rodenhaeuser demonstrated his skills in a beautiful interactive virtual museum where art on the screens looks three-dimensional. Completed using an Illumetry IO 3D display, which “conveys the illusion of depth by distorting the perspective based on the viewer’s position in real time,” the exhibition allows you to explore the works by wearing stereo glasses.

“Perhaps akin to trompe-l’œil or perspectival anamorphosis that have been used in artwork for centuries, this approach invites the viewer to explore the boundary between illusion and reality,” says Rodenhaeuser.

The art pieces presented include a reconstruction of a Mayan building and a replica of the Burney Relief, an ancient Babylonian plaque, which can be inspected with a special “stylus.”

If this idea excites you, check out Steven Mark Kübler’s interactive museum full of controllable digital particles.

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