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Exhibitions

William Blake etching named Head of a Damned Soul.

William Blake’s Universe

Discover William Blake’s universe and a constellation of European artists seeking spirituality in their lives and art in response to war, revolution and political turbulence.

Double carved figure

Pitoti

Thu 7 March 2013 - Fri 22 March 2013

Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

• P • I • T • O • T • I • is a multimedia digital rock art exhibition showing at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (MAA), Downing Street from the 7th of March 2013 to the 23rd of March 2013. It grew from years of research by Dr Christopher Chippindale and Dr Frederick Baker of the Cambridge Univeristy Prehistoric Picture Project, and explores the links between the world of Archaeology and the world of film, digital humanities and computer vision.

The word 'Pitoti' comes from the Lombard dialect and means 'little puppets', a local name for the carvings created by the residents of the valley thousands of years ago, predominantly in the Iron Age. Dr. Chippindale says, "The special thing about ancient rock-art, especially Val Camonica rock-art with its strong, analytical and vivid graphics, is that it is autobiographical. This is the world of ancient people, as they themselves experienced it, as they themselves chose to depict it". This exhibition takes these carvings as a starting point and has filmed, photographed, animated, and re-presented them in the 21st century with new digital graphic technologies.

"What the figures cannot do and do not do is move: there were no film cameras or animation studios in prehistoric times. But with our film, cameras and animation studios, today we can take the metaphor literally. If these figures are like stills from a cartoon, we can animate them and create a cartoon. If they are moments frozen from a narrative, we can tell a full story with them", explains Dr. Baker. This playful injection of digital technology allows you to navigate the 70km Val Camonica valley, projected onto a whole wall, with a video game joystick, or interact with a digital rock face through a touchscreen, moving the figures around in mini multiplayer games.

This exhibition is EU funded and is a joint venture between archaeologists from Cambridge University (UK), the local research institute which has been studying the Valcamonica figures for 50 years, the Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici (I), and digital graphics specialists from the University of Applied Sciences in St Pölten, (A). The show also includes a constribution from the Bauhaus Universität in Weimar (D).

Cost: free

Enquiries and booking

No need to book.

Booking not required

Timing

10:30am-4:30pm Tuesday-Saturday every week from Thursday 7 March 2013 until Friday 22 March 2013

All times

Thu 7 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Fri 8 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Sat 9 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Tue 12 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Wed 13 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Thu 14 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Fri 15 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Sat 16 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Tue 19 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Wed 20 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Thu 21 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM
Fri 22 March 2013 10:30AM - 4:30PM

Venue

Address: Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Downing Street
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
CB2 3DZ
Map
Email: admin@maa.cam.ac.uk
Telephone: +44 1223 333516
Fax: +44 1223 333517
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