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ABSTRACT
Stereoscopy is a very strong emotional and esthetic factor in visual arts and can be greatly explored using stereoscopic projection systems. However, due to their high cost these systems are very restricted to artists. In this sketch, I describe a horizontal stereoscopic projection system, inspired in the "Responsive Workbench" (GMD, Germany) and the "Taula estereoscópica" (UPC, Spain ), that is low cost and can be set up in a small studio. In addition, this system has advantages over vertical projection systems as it is shown in Mimesis, the function that made the organ.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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Layer, H. 1980. Exploring Stereo Images: a Changing Awareness of Space in the Fine Arts. In Leonardo 4, 233--238.
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Agueda Simó , Juan Francisco López , Yu Uny Cao, MSA's attractors: navigational aids for virtual environments, ACM SIGGRAPH 99 Conference abstracts and applications, p.213, August 08-13, 1999, Los Angeles, California, United States
[doi> 10.1145/311625.312032]
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Sorensen, V. and Russett, R. 1999. Computer Stereographics: the Coalescence of Virtual Space and Artistic Expression. In Leonardo 32, 41--48.
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