Unquiet Postures. Augmented Reality in the Exhibition Spaces of Sculptural Bodies

This paper explores how augmented, mixed, and multimedia reality can transform the interpretation and exhibition of sculptural heritage in museum environments. Developed through a research project between Università Iuav di Venezia and the Regional Museum Directorate of Veneto, the study focuses on Greek and Roman statues preserved in the National Archaeological Museum of Venice, many of which were altered by Renaissance restorations. Using digital photogrammetry and Structure from Motion workflows, the authors generated accurate digital twins of the sculptures, enabling the analysis of added limbs, reconstructed postures, and historical transformations. These models were then integrated into new exhibition scenarios including animated projections, responsive rotating pedestals, immersive storytelling rooms, and HoloLens mixed-reality holograms. The proposed installations enhance visitor engagement by revealing the hidden biographies of the statues, especially in cases of absence due to loans or restoration. The research demonstrates how interactive technologies can convert the museum into a hybrid learning environment where physical artifacts and digital replicas coexist to improve accessibility, participation, and historical understanding.

Categories: 2_Detail/Sculpture scale
Author: Ciammaichella Massimiliano, Liva Gabriella, Rinelli Marco