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Epic projection project brings Pompeii back to life

Thirty-one Digital Projection’E-Vision Laser 11000 4K-UHD projectors show street life in Pompei before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in an ambitious exhibition in Paris.

Epic projection project brings Pompeii back to life

Digital Projection has supported French integrator ETC Onlyview (ETC Audiovisuel) in an ambitious project to bring Pompeii to life at the Grand Palais exhibition and museum complex in Paris.

The Réunion des Musées Nationaux – Grand Palais’ Pompeii exhibition was created in collaboration with the Pompeii Archaeological Park and documentary production company Gedeon Programmes to present the city before, during and after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.

The idea to create an immersive experience of Pompeii was envisioned by Stéphane Millière, president of Gedeon Programmes and producer of Pompeii-related docudrama, Les dernières heures de Pompéi – which was broadcast on the France 5 TV channel earlier this year – and in collaboration with the Réunion des Musées Nationaux et du Grand Palais (Rmn-GP).

“After visiting the exhibitions at the Institut du Monde Arabe (IMA, Arab World Institute) and the work of the Light Workshop, I realised that with the 4K images and the rich audiovisual material we had already produced, we had the opportunity to create an exhibition that would place the visitors at the heart of these exceptional excavations,” Millière said.

Set in a huge 1,200 sq m space with an 18m ceiling height in the Salon d’Honneur of the Grand Palais, visitors are immediately plunged into a Pompeiian piazza, circa 79 A.D. This area – which houses a statue and giant projection screen depicting the momentous eruption at set intervals – then splits off into two streets. The scenography of the streets with the domus (houses) creates a walk-through setup which contains other types of projection, including 3D models of period buildings, which were created by Aristéas and further enhance the degree of immersion already engendered by the video screens.

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Roei Amit, director of Digital for Rmn-GP, commented: “One of our methods for this exhibition was to focus on staged projections within an architectural design. AV technology is of growing importance in exhibition spaces; having a strong digital component offers us many possibilities, broadens our modes of expressions and ultimately benefits the public and its engagement.”

“Visitors enter this gigantic space and face an architectural space of projections,” Amit explained. “The projection screens give perspective, extending the streets at their ends, and the walls of the street domus serve as a projection support. Video projection also appears inside each domus; a total of 31 x 4K video projectors were installed to support this.”

The 31 projectors used in the exhibition are Digital Projection’s E-Vision Laser 11000 4K-UHD, as chosen by ETC Onlyview. These powerful single chip DLP projectors  produce 10,500 lumens, which ensured plenty of brightness against any ambient light in the exhibition, while the 4K-UHD resolution meant that visitors could get up close to the projections to grasp all the clarity and details of the content. The installation also benefited from the flexibility of the projector’s MultiAxis orientation, which was essential as a number were mounted in portrait mode or pointing down. Built-in edge blending also enabled large seamless images, immersing the visitors in the day-to-day life of Pompeii.

Four E-Vision Laser 11000 4K-UHD projectors are rigged on both ends of the exhibition to project a perspective of a Pompeiian street, which immediately immerses visitors as they enter the exhibition. Two domus flank each side of the street and benefit from video-mapping on their outside thanks to a couple of projectors projecting across the street on each of the four facades.

The piazza is arguably the cornerstone of the exhibition with a projection of Mount Vesuvius in the background comprising two Digital Projection 4K projectors.

Inside each domus, visitors familiarise themselves with the story of Pompeii. Domus I gives a generic presentation of Pompeii with the help of three 4K projectors, each projecting on a purpose-built wall. In Domus II, visitors learn about the archaeological excavations over the years, thanks to an E-Vision Laser 8500 WUXGA projector coupled with an ultra-short 0.57 lens, while Domus III hosts more artefacts with two further 4K projectors describing the analysis of the excavations: one projector projects images on the floor using another 0.57 ultra-short lens, while another 4K projector provides further explanation on the wall. Finally, in Domus IV, visitors can marvel at a 15m long by 5.5m high fresco rendered in the smallest details thanks to six side-rigged Digital Projection boxes, blurring the frontiers between the real and the virtual.

“We had already worked with the E-Vision laser projectors on previous exhibitions, so we knew that the technical characteristics of this product were exactly what we needed,” said Laurent Segelle, business manager for ETC Onlyview. “We required the 4K resolution, but on top of that, the colour renderings and luminosity are perfect for this kind of large-scale image and the multiple choice of optics on this video projector make it adaptable for each projection.”

Content for the projectors in the street section of the exhibition was created by Gedeon Programmes. The images, distributed by an Onlyview media server, depict life as it was in Pompeii at the time, and are supplemented by the sounds of the city, such as children playing, inhabitants going about their business, and soldiers marching down the street.

As the exhibition cycle goes on, animated scenes of city life slowly begin to fade away as the eruption approaches, replaced by dogs barking and sounds of panic, palpable by the change in atmosphere. The projectors begin to display a wash of grey, smoky cloud that overtakes all images of Pompeii. “After a colossal noise, followed by silence, the light returns and we start again on a cycle of 30 minutes,” said Millière.

After being postponed because of the pandemic, the exhibition opened on the 1st July and is ongoing. The original intention for this once-in-a-lifetime event was to run until 27th September, but in light of the success of the exhibition, the organisers recently announced that it will be extended until the 2nd November.

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Posted: 14th October 2020


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