News and Talks

“Fly Me There” Unveils the World’s First 360-Degree LED Immersion into Cultural Heritage

Professor Sarah Kenderdine is leading the groundbreaking “Fly Me There” exhibition at Hong Kong International Airport, offering an immersive experience of over 40 cultural heritage sites from China, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Thailand, Turkey, and Sri Lanka through the world’s first 360-degree 3D interactive LED cinema. The high-resolution 3D panoramic imagery creates an incredibly lifelike experience, making visitors feel as though they are soaring through the skies on a breathtaking VR journey. This exhibition is a result of the “Future Cinema Systems: Next-Generation Art Technologies” project, developed in collaboration with the Visualization Research Centre at Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) and the Airport Authority Hong Kong (AAHK).

Media Coverage: Airport Authority Hong Kong | Travel And Tour World | Hong Kong Commercial Daily

Professor Sarah Kenderdine Delivers Speech at the European Film Awards Lucerne 2024

Professor Sarah Kenderdine delivered a speech on “Future Cinema Systems: Next generation technologies for cultural heritage, archives and performance” at the Filmtech Exhibition, part of the European Film Awards Lucerne 2024, and contributed her expertise to a high-profile panel discussion on how Swiss technology shapes the international film industry, alongside Anaïs Emery (GIFF), Nicola Ruffo (Swiss Films), and Bob Sumner (Disney Research Studios).

La bataille de Morat, comme si vous y étiez – Le Temps

A Lausanne, dans les dédales de l’Ecole polytechnique fédérale, le Laboratoire de muséologie expérimentale (eM +) est à la pointe des technologies numériques et immersives au service des institutions culturelles. Il est piloté par la professeure Sarah Kenderdine, qui dirige également l’espace d’exposition EPFL Pavilions. Invitée du Geneva International Film Festival (GIFF), la Néo-Zélandaise y donne ce mercredi une conférence, en marge de la présentation d’une installation immersive du mythique Panorama de la bataille de Morat, une toile monumentale (100 mètres de long, 10 de haut) peinte par Louis Braun et son équipe en 1893.

Le panorama de la bataille de Morat exposé au GIFF en version numérique – RTS 19h30

19h30 – RTS | 7/11/2024

Le panorama de la bataille de Morat, la fameuse défaite du duc de Bourgogne Charles le Téméraire face aux redoutables Confédérés, a été entièrement numérisé. Le résultat, spectaculaire, est présenté pour la première fois au public au Festival international du film de Genève (GIFF).

The Augmented Murten Panorama Makes Its Debut as an Immersive Experience at GIFF

After two decades out of sight, the Panorama of the Battle of Murten has been brought to life as an immersive experience by the Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL. Making its debut at the 30th Geneva International Film Festival (GIFF) from November 1 to 10, this multi-sensory presentation is part of an ongoing augmentation project that augments visuals with sounds and scents, transporting visitors into the heart of the historic battle.

GIFF Honour Sarah Kenderdine with the Tales of Swiss Innovation Award

On the occasion of its 30th edition, GIFF celebrates the remarkable career of Professor Sarah Kenderdine. As Director and Curator of EPFL Pavilions and head of the Laboratory for Experimental Museology (eM+) at EPFL, Professor Kenderdine leads pioneering research into immersive experiences for galleries, libraries, archives, and museums. Through installations exhibited worldwide, she integrates cultural heritage with new media arts, particularly in interactive cinema, augmented reality, and embodied storytelling. As part of the Festival, Professor Kenderdine will present a conference on Future Cinema Systems along with a curated selection of works exploring these captivating themes on 6 Nov.

Symposium on Curating Cultural Big Data

In partnership with the Consulate General of Switzerland in Hong Kong, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) proudly present the symposium, Curating Cultural Big Data.

Digital technologies preserve cultural heritage and make information readily available to the public. By converting data, documents and processes to digital form, cultural treasures can be shared and appreciated by all. Digitised cultural databases also drive research and innovation. The in-depth integration of the cultural industry and digital technology has created a variety of emerging businesses.

In this lively discussion among world-class experts in digital humanities, we will explore the applications of technology in museology through research examples and the countless opportunities digital technology offers the public to experience culture and learn.

EPFL & HKBU present 360⁰ Terapixel Panorama of the Battle of Murten 1893/2024

Join us for guided tours of the digitized Panorama of the Battle of Murten at the HKBU Visualization Research Center on 9 and 10 November. The monumental 10m x 100m painting, created in 1893 by Louis Braun, depicts the historic Swiss victory over Charles the Bold in 1476. Now, through cutting-edge digitization techniques, the artwork is being transformed into a stunning 1.6 terapixel digital image, offering viewers unprecedented detail and immersion. The project exemplifies groundbreaking work in digital conservation, data science, and immersive technologies.

The event is part of Swiss Month Hong Kong. The guided tours will be followed by the Symposium on Curating Cultural Big Data on 11 November, where experts will explore the technological and cultural significance of this project.

eM+ Featured in UNESCO Courier’s October 2024 Issue

In the October 2024 issue of the UNESCO Courier, themed “Reimagining Museums”, world experts in museology discuss how digital technologies are transforming the visitor experience. Sarah Kenderdine, Director of the Laboratory for Experimental Museology at EPFL, shares how large-scale digital visualizations of cultural heritage materials and data are empowering new modes of public participation in culture.

Cassis and Braže Visit eM+’s GESDA Installation at CERN Science Gateway

The Federal Councilor Ignazio Cassis and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Latvia Baiba Braže were given demonstrations of the Geneva Public Portal to Anticipation at the GESDA Summit, held from 9-11 October 2024 at CERN Science Gateway. This interactive installation, a collaboration between GESDA and the Laboratory for Experimental Museology at EPFL, connects science and society through generative AI. In 2025, the installation will be featured in the official Swiss Pavilion at the World Expo Osaka-Kansai.

Plenary address by Sarah Kenderdine at GESDA Summit

Under the theme of “The Great Acceleration”, the fourth GESDA Summit brought together scientists, diplomats, policymakers, innovators, executives, and citizens from around the world to the CERN Science Gateway to explore the future of science and humanities. On 11 October 2024, Sarah Kenderdine, Director of the Laboratory for Experimental Museology at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland, delivered a plenary address on “The History of the Future: Public Engagement in the Science of Tomorrow”.

Professor Sarah Kenderdine gave the opening keynote of the 33rd IPC Conference

On 2 October 2024, Professor Sarah Kenderdine gave the opening keynote of the 33rd IPC Conference titled “Computational Museology: Six Themes of Transformation”.

UNESCO Recognition Project Kicks Off 33rd IPC Conference

The workshop for the UNESCO Recognition Project – Panoramas as Memory of the World took place on the first day of the 33rd IPC Conference. The event featured speeches by Christof Bareiss (Swiss Commission for UNESCO), Nicolas Ducimetière (Fondation Bodmer) and Patrick Deicher (Bourbaki Panorama). Following the presentations, roundtable discussions moderated by Daniel Jaquet (eM+) brought together panorama owners, conservators, curators, and scholars, opening a dialogue on the criteria for inscription applications.

The 33rd IPC Conference: Panoramas as Memory of the World

The International Panorama Council and the Laboratory for Experimental Museology hosted the 33rd IPC Conference “Panoramas as Memory of the World” at the EPFL Pavilions in Lausanne, Switzerland from 2-4 October 2024. The conference featured a diverse range of session topics focused on panoramic media, including socio-cultural and political roles of panoramic memories, the mechanics of illusion from analogue to digital, digitization and conservation, and the intersection of panoramas and the Memory of the World, a UNESCO program.

Upcoming Lecture by Sarah Kenderdine at the Data Visualization Meeting, 20 June 2024

Sarah Kenderdine from the Laboratory for Experimental Museology at EPFL, Fabienne Kilchör, co-founder of the Bern agency Emphase and Max Frischknecht, lecturer on the Design+Art course at HSLU, are attending this meeting of our Data Visualization group. The focus this time is “art” – we are looking forward to exciting presentations!

20.06.2024, 4.30 p.m.–6.30 p.m. – Effingerstrasse 47 / Haslerstrasse 30, 3005 Bern (Room E102) and online (hybrid)

The Digital Twin of the Panorama of the Battle of Murten presented to the Federal Councilor Guy Parmelin and his delegation in Hong Kong

During the July 2024 visit of the Swiss Delegation to China (10yrs of the Bilateral relations Switzerland-China), the Federal Councillor Guy Parmelin visited the EPFL partner Hong Kong Baptist University, where the Digital Twin of the Panorama of the Battle of Murten has been showcased at the Visualization Research Center.

The Panorama of the Battle of Murten project has been awarded the Optimus Prize 2024

The DIAGRAM project (Digitizing and Augmenting the Panorama of the Battle of Murten) enters in its second phase (2024-2026), which includes exhibitions, shows and the release of the website (2025). The scientific communication project entitled “The TeraPixel Panorama” received funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation (Agora) and has been awarded the 2024 Optimus Prize.

Sarah Kenderdine Speaks at Colloque “Musées et pouvoir(s)”

The City of Geneva is organizing a day of reflection on the social and societal utility of museums, open to all, on Tuesday, June 18, 2024, at the MEG.
Professor Sarah Kenderdine from École Polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne discussed “The transformative power of digital museology” during Part 2: Taking power and explored broader implications during the round table, moderated by Gabriel de Montmollin, Director of the International Museum of the Reformation, Geneva.

EYE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2024: Presenting Audiovisual Collections: Experiments and Explorations

On 26 through 29 May 2024, Eye Filmmuseum, the University of Amsterdam and the Laboratory for Experimental Museology (eM+) at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) will present the 9th Eye International Conference, this time with the topic ‘Presenting Audiovisual Collections: Experiments and Explorations’.

Sarah Kenderdine Delivered Keynote at 2nd International Museum Expo in Kolkata

Commemorating International Museum Day, the International Museum Expo is organized annually starting on May 18. The second edition took place at Science City in Kolkata from May 18–19, 2024. Following the opening session, Sarah Kenderdine, Director of the Lab for Experimental Museology at EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland, delivered a keynote address on “Museum: A Confluence of Art, Science, and Technology”.

Sarah Kenderdine gave speech at Tsinghua University Academy of Arts & Design

On May 10, 2024, the Academy of Fine Arts of Tsinghua University hosted a lecture titled “Computational Museology: Art and Science in the Age of Experience” in the C528 Lecture Hall. Professor Sarah Kenderdine from EPFL was invited to speak on topics including interactive archives and emerging narratives, deep fakes and blockchain sovereignty, embodied knowledge systems and performative interfaces, and the scientific visualization of museums in the era of experience.

Cosmos Archaeology Workshop: Computational Museology

Join us for a workshop on computational museology with Professor Sarah Kenderdine, Director and Lead Curator of EPFL Pavilions, and gain practical insights from her extensive curatorial experience. Explore the seamless integration and practical application of immersive visualization technologies, visual analytics, aesthetics, and cultural big data.

Cosmos Archaeology travels to China

Cosmos Archaeology, Exploring the Universe through Art and Science is travelling to China, presented at the Shanghai Astronomy Museum from 18 May to 17 September 2024. The exhibition is co-curated by Sarah Kenderdine from EPFL’s Laboratory for Experimental Museology (eM+) and EPFL Pavilions, Jean-Paul Kneib from EPFL’s Laboratory of Astrophysics (LASTRO), and independent Chinese curator Iris Long. It highlights collaborations between artists and prominent astronomical projects, including the MUST Telescope from Tsinghua University and the Chinese SKA Science Projects led by the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory..

Sarah Kenderdine Keynote speaker at NEXT IN Museums Innovation Impact Summit

April 24 – 25 2024, Madrid, Spain

NEXT IN is a summit that brings together leaders from across the cultural sector to exchange ideas, share best practices, and explore the future. It provides a space to showcase innovative projects that are transforming public spaces and creating meaningful visitor experiences. The summit features some of the most influential global figures in museums, architecture, and design. It offers a unique experience to explore the creativity and innovation shaping current and future trends in the industry.

Upcoming lecture by Sarah Kenderdine for ETH Design++

Computational Museology: Art & Science in the Age of Experience

17.30 – 18.30 CET, 30 April 2024, Zürich Hönggerberg HIB E 52

Computational museology is a scaffold that unites machine intelligence with data curation, ontology with visualization, and communities of publics and practitioners with embodied participation through kinaesthetic interfaces. Computational museology empowers cultural organisations to link all forms of culture and materiality: objects, knowledge systems, representation and participation. Research at the Laboratory for Experimental Museology (eM+) reaches beyond object-oriented curation to blend experimental curatorship with contemporary aesthetics, digital humanism and emerging technologies.

Computational Museology – upcoming lecture by Sarah Kenderdine for ARCHiVe Online Academy

Computational Museology: Cultural Heritage and the Digital Museum

15.00 – 17.00 CET, 4 April 2024, Online on Zoom (register)

This lecture curated by Sarah Kenderdine explores key themes including interactive archives and emergent narrative, deep fakes and blockchain sovereignties, embodied knowledge systems and performative interfaces and scientific visualisation for museums in the age of experience. She will also give an overview of EPFL Pavilions exhibitions and focus the discussion on Deep Fakes: Art and Its Double. 

The digital has a big role to play in the decolonisation of museums | The Hindu

The Hindu – Bengaluru | February 01, 2024

Museologist Sarah Irene Brutton Kenderdine, in Bengaluru recently to deliver a lecture, speaks about how technology is altering not only the way we view museums, but also culture and history in a broader sense.

Swissnex Interview on Experimental Museology in India with Sarah Kenderdine

SWISSNEX IN INDIA, CONSULATE GENERAL OF SWITZERLAND
We had the opportunity to interview Sarah Kenderdine — Professor of Digital Museology at EPFL, Switzerland – at our Bengaluru office in January 2024. During her visit, she also gave a lecture titled ‘Museums in the Age of Experience’ at the Science Gallery Bengaluru.

Prof Sarah Kenderdine spotlighted in Kulturplatz on Swiss Radio and Television (SRF)

If there is one person in Switzerland who is passionate about immersion, it is Sarah Kenderdine. It operates from the EPFL in Lausanne and has its own LAB, which is primarily concerned with the museum of the future, be it immersive, augmented or entirely virtual. She is currently in the process of implementing several projects, including converting the Battle of Murten panorama into a virtual experience. Or to resurrect one of the first world exhibitions in Paris in 1867 through stereoscopic images. In previous works, she has also reconstructed the destroyed Buddhas of Bamiyan and resurrected the site of Palmyra in Syria in the museum. She has also converted the Montreux Jazz Festival Collection into a tangible, interactive application.

Changing Paradigms: Digital Twins and Buddhist Heritage in the Global Age

A full-day workshop to brainstorm the new frontiers of technological intervention in preserving heritage and its impact, 22 January 2024, India International Center, New Delhi.
This workshop is part of a multi-institutional joint research project by a research team from IIT Jodhpur, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL), IIT Indore, FLAME University and University of Geneva. The project, ‘Digital Twins: Negotiating Identity and Translocated Heritage in the Global Age,’ is funded by ICSSR & SNF.

‘Museums in the Age of Experience’, Prof Kenderdine’s Lecture at Science Gallery Bengaluru

In a landmark event on 19 January 2024, Science Gallery Bengaluru inaugurates its new building with a lecture titled ‘Museums in the Age of Experience’ by Prof. Sarah Kenderdine. In this lecture, Prof. Kenderdine explores how computational methods are reshaping traditional curation, propelling museums into the future by seamlessly blending the tangible with the digital. She will also give an overview of EPFL Pavilions exhibitions and focus the discussion on Cosmos Archaeology: Explorations in Time and Space.

‘Computational Museology: Interfaces to Cultural (big) Data’, Prof Kenderdine’s keynote at ZHdK

9 November 9 2023, Zurich University of the Arts

Computational museology is a scaffold that unites machine intelligence with data curation, ontology with visualization, and communities of publics and practitioners with embodied participation through immersive interfaces. Research into computational museology at the Laboratory for Experimental Museology (eM+) reaches beyond object-oriented curation to blend experimental curatorship with contemporary aesthetics, digital humanism and emerging technologies. This lecture explores key themes from the laboratory at the forefront of immersive visualization including: interactive archives and emergent narrative; deep mapping and carto-criticism; deep fakes and blockchain sovereignties; embodied knowledge systems and; performative interfaces.

Registration Open – Narratives From the Long Tail: Transforming Access to Audiovisual Archives Event Series, 25 – 29 September

With generous support from the SNF Sinergia project Narratives From the Long Tail: Transforming Access to Audiovisual Archives, we are very pleased to invite you to join one or all of three unique events from our seminar series. In involving 40 seminal speakers from across the world, together with film screenings and exhibition tours—do join us in the week of 25-29 September 2023 inclusive. All events are located at the stunning EPFL Pavilions or the Laboratory for Experimental Museology EPFL in Lausanne. Click to read detailed information and register now!

Prof Sarah Kenderdine gives the opening keynote of DH2023

Two fantastic keynote lectures opened and closed DH2023: the opening was by Professor Sarah Kenderdine, entitled “Two-Fold Revolutions: Computational Museology in the Age of Experience”, and the closing was delivered by Claire Fernandez, entitled “Contesting Power in the Digital Age: The Role of Civil Society in Europe”.

Launch of the Norman Foster Institute

Since the launch of the Norman Foster Foundation in 2017, its mission has been to promote interdisciplinary thinking and research to help new generations to anticipate the future. In order to respond to the growing importance of urbanisation and its challenges, we embark upon a new initiative, the Norman Foster Institute. Professor Sarah Kenderdine is of The Academic Chairs. 

Special tour of the Panorama of the Battle of Murten (DIAGRAM, Laboratory for Experimental Museology)

During the EPFL Open Days (April 29-30, 2023), 120 visitors got the opportunity to get a special tour of the lab and the gigantic Panorama of the Battle of Murten! Click the link on the title to see a timelapse of the visit!

Immersive Art Exhibitions: Spellbinding, or Forgettable? | The New York Times

Experiential art spaces are cropping up worldwide. Critics pan them, audiences love them and they have the attention of the art world. In Switzerland, there is a laboratory dedicated to the development of immersive exhibitions. At the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Sarah Kenderdine, a professor of digital museology, and her team are researching the best ways to use digital technology for better curatorship, whether by encouraging museum visitors to interact with the exhibits and each other or by finding better ways for the public to access a museum’s collection.

Swiss to create world’s biggest digitised artwork | swissinfo.ch

Murtenschlacht Panorama [Panorama of the Battle of Murten] is a huge circular painting depicting the victory near Bern of the Swiss cantons over the Duke of Burgundy, “Charles the Bold”, in 1476. Produced by the German painter Louis Braun in 1893, the 10m x 100 m canvas is stocked on several giant rolls each weighing 700 kg. Following restoration work, scientists at the Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) will begin digitisationExternal link of the painting this August.

Un trésor national suisse sur le point d’être digitalisé

Avis dexperts | 25/04/2023

Avec Daniel Jaquet

La Bataille de Morat, cʹest un des événements clés de lʹhistoire Suisse. Une bataille et une victoire remportée le 22 juin 1476 par les confédérés suisses face au duc Charles le Téméraire dans le cadre des guerres de Bourgogne. 

Un laboratoire de l’EPFL va numériser le Panorama de la Bataille de Morat, une fresque qui mesure 1’000 mètres carrés

Le 19h30 – RTS | 25/04/2023

Avec Sarah Kenderdine, Daniel Jaquet, Loïc Serafin

La digitalisation du Panorama de la bataille de Morat par un laboratoire de l’EPFL débutera cet été. Ce projet donnera naissance à la plus grande image unique et ininterrompue jamais créée.

The Digitisation of the Panorama of Murten is about to start

EPFL News | 25.04.2023

After two months of conservation and restoration work, Louis Braun’s monumental work, created in 1893 on some 1000 m2 of canvas, is about to being digitised. The process will generate the largest digital image ever created and will allow for unprecedented immersive and interactive viewing experiences.

Restauré, le Panorama de la bataille de Morat va être numérisé

Le Temps avec l’ATS | 25.04.2023

L’œuvre titanesque du peintre allemand Louis Braun représentant la victoire des Confédérés contre Charles le Téméraire en 1476, exposée pour la dernière fois lors de l’Expo.02, va devenir, une fois scannée la plus grande image digitale jamais créée

Panorama der Schlacht von Murten bald digitalisiert

Bluewin News | 25.04.2023

Das Panoramabild der Schlacht von Murten, das 1893 vom deutschen Maler Louis Braun geschaffen wurde, hat ein erstes Facelifting hinter sich. Nach zweimonatigen Konservierungs- und Restaurierungsarbeiten beginnt nun eine Digitalisierungsphase.

SONGLINES exhibition opens at Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac

“Songlines. Chant des pistes du désert australien” est une exposition itinérante internationale produite par le National Museum of Australia avec le soutien constant des gardiens traditionnels de la Loi et des savoirs aborigènes sur l’histoire des Sept Sœurs.

Lieu : Galerie Jardin
Dates : Du mardi 04 avril 2023 au dimanche 02 juillet 2023

Sarah Kenderdine gives keynote at World.Minds Annual Symposium

Sarah Kenderdine gives keynote speech at World.Minds Annual Symposium (Zurich) on March 15 2023.

Virgin of the Rocks AR on show at Pittlerwerke, Leipzig

Leonardo da Vinci’s Virgin of the Rocks AR (LDV.VOTR.AR), 2019, the artwork of Sarah KENDERDINE & Jeffrey SHAW is on show at Pittlerwerke, Leipzig, April 19 – July 09 2023.

Digitalization has always embraced art; and today, artists worldwide are creating new digital spaces and narratives. DIMENSIONS shows how art has been shaped by the dialogue between new technologies and artistic forms of expression throughout history.

Artificial Intelligence: Friend or Foe?

Newly released online interfaces have brought powerful artificial intelligence programs within everyone’s reach. In EPFL’s recent issue of Dimensions, we look at what could make 2023 a watershed year in our relationship with algorithms. “IN THE ARTS, THE OPPORTUNITIES OF AI OUTWEIGH THE RISKS” Prof. Sarah Kenderdine, who heads the Experimental Museology Laboratory (eM+), sees generative AI as a new source of inspiration for artists. But she also warns of various challenges.

Lighten Up! Exhibition opening on 23 March

The opening of Lighten Up! On Biology and Time will be celebrated on Thursday 23 March at EPFL Pavilions and Forum Rolex with speeches by the four curators, an address by Professor Till Roenneberg and a late-night opening of the exhibition until 9 pm.

rts.ch | Restitution d’œuvres: faut-il vider nos musées?

Le remplacement par des copies? Frises du Parthénon, sculptures remarquables, Pierre de Rosette, buste de Néfertiti, nombreuses sont les pièces majeures conservées dans les musées qui ne sont pourtant pas près d’être rendues. Pourquoi ne pas en faire des copies, et rendre les originaux? La question suscite une levée de boucliers, alors même que les technologies disponibles, certaines présentées récemment à l’EPFL dans l’exposition “Deep Fakes”, sont absolument stupéfiantes.

Diagram: the conservation begins!

Our project enters the conservation phase. We have built an inspection platform which will allow the conservation team to prepare the 1.000 m2 of painting for the digitalisation phase (April 2023). Watch the timelapse video of the rig by clicking on the title.

This inspection platform was designed for the project by engineer specialists. It is motorised and automated, fully equipped to the highest conservation standards. The same system will be used for the digitalisation phase, with another platform made to measure to allow the imaging with our sponsor Phase One, leader for cultural heritage imaging technologies.

Stay tuned for the next phase and book the dates if you would like to get the chance to view the painting during the EPFL Open Days (29-30 April 2023).