WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian American Art Museum has launched an immersive 360-degree virtual reality (VR) app for Apple and Android mobile devices, Renwick Gallery WONDER 360. It allows audiences to explore in 3-D the entirety of the museums 2015 blockbuster exhibition, WONDER, presented at its Renwick Gallery. The app expands the visitor experience through emerging technologies. It is the first VR mobile app that the Smithsonian has published.
The museum has always embraced new technologies to bring our collection to people wherever they are, said Betsy Broun, the Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Were excited to use the latest virtual-reality technology to add a new dimension to the museum experience.
WONDER was the Renwicks most popular exhibition to date, attracting more than 730,000 visitors from November 2015 through July 2016 and creating a sensation on social media. Nine leading contemporary artistsJennifer Angus, Chakaia Booker, Gabriel Dawe, Tara Donovan, Patrick Dougherty, Janet Echelman, John Grade, Maya Lin and Leo Villarealcreated site-specific, gallery-sized installations from an array of unexpected materials. Renwick Gallery WONDER 360 offers users a virtual walk-through of the museum with 360-degree, 3-D panoramic views of all nine artists installations and videos of the artists discussing their works.
Renwick Gallery WONDER 360 is our first major experiment with VR, and were excited to keep exploring the potential of this emerging technology, said Sara Snyder, chief of the museums media and technology office. The app captures the WONDER exhibition as a moment in time and lets you carry the beauty of that experience around in your pocket, anywhere in the world. It represents a whole new way of sharing art with the public.
The app content was created by the museums media and technology office; the technical development came from software tools developed by San Francisco-based InstaVR Inc. It is available for free download via iTunes for iOS devices and Google Play for Android. Although a VR headset or viewer is not required to use the app, the 3-D feature can only be experienced when using such a viewer, such as Google Cardboard.