By KENS 5 Staff
SAN ANTONIO — A unique new exhibit is coming to San Antonio that follows the recent trend of immersive experiences offered to guests.
Guests will be able to literally step into the work of artist Vincent Van Gogh in the "Immersive Van Gogh" exhibit coming to the Alamo City on November 18th.
The 360-degree digital art experience takes visitors on a journey through the artist's masterpiece paintings. His works of art will be projected over 500,000 cubic feet and will include more than 60,000 frames of video and more than 90,000,000 pixels, according to the exhibit's website.
“It’s a reflective work, showing the artist as who he was," says Svetlana Dvoretsky, cofounder of the company which is organizing Immersive Van Gogh.
She said that, since she started her work on the traveling exhibit, she's felt a deep connection to the artist.
“My life and the life of my colleagues and fellow producers, this is what it’s been the past two years, 24/7,” she said. “I feel that I have met him. I feel like we are relatives.”
She first experienced a version of the exhibit on a trip to Paris.
“I knew the moment I saw it – and I loved it, I loved the concept – I knew that I would be involved.”
Tickets went on sale this week for the exhibit's run in San Antonio, starting in November. The show is opening in several cities throughout the U.S. and Canada, but Dvoretzky says every city has its own unique experience designed specifically for the space.
“We have old banks, we have warehouses, we have industrial, we have very historic landmarks,” she said. “So they're all very different.”
Tickets for the exhibit have been limited in the past due to coronavirus safety measures, so they’ve kept it open for longer hours to get more people in. Dvoretsky said that as restrictions begin to loosen, they plan on scaling back operating hours.
“There is a huge demand for tickets. Especially when we have a limited capacity, with COVID and the pandemic and everything, it’s very, very, limited,” she said. “So we’ve always been pushed to actually be open for very, very long hours to accommodate everybody that wants to see it.”
She believes Immersive Van Gogh will have a profound impact on people who have just gone through a long year of isolation.
“Van Gogh, who spent so much time in isolation and went through the depression and loneliness, so and so forth, as everyone can relate,” Dvoretsky said. “Every human being on this planet can relate to what the world went through in the last year and a half.”
She said that, since she started her work on the traveling exhibit, she's felt a deep connection to the artist.
“My life and the life of my colleagues and fellow producers, this is what it’s been the past two years, 24/7,” she said. “I feel that I have met him. I feel like we are relatives.”
She first experienced a version of the exhibit on a trip to Paris.
“I knew the moment I saw it – and I loved it, I loved the concept – I knew that I would be involved.”
Tickets went on sale this week for the exhibit's run in San Antonio, starting in November. The show is opening in several cities throughout the U.S. and Canada, but Dvoretzky says every city has its own unique experience designed specifically for the space.
“We have old banks, we have warehouses, we have industrial, we have very historic landmarks,” she said. “So they're all very different.”
Tickets for the exhibit have been limited in the past due to coronavirus safety measures, so they’ve kept it open for longer hours to get more people in. Dvoretsky said that as restrictions begin to loosen, they plan on scaling back operating hours.
“There is a huge demand for tickets. Especially when we have a limited capacity, with COVID and the pandemic and everything, it’s very, very, limited,” she said. “So we’ve always been pushed to actually be open for very, very long hours to accommodate everybody that wants to see it.”
She believes Immersive Van Gogh will have a profound impact on people who have just gone through a long year of isolation.
“Van Gogh, who spent so much time in isolation and went through the depression and loneliness, so and so forth, as everyone can relate,” Dvoretsky said. “Every human being on this planet can relate to what the world went through in the last year and a half.”
For tickets, click on link: https://tickets.goghsanantonio.com/#/
6 comments:
Who?
Vincent van Gogh y ese half coco transgender dumpster rat son un par de locos! One cut his ear off and the other cut his dick off! Hahahaha!
August 17, 2021 at 3:36 PM
I D I O T A !
I'd rather watch the beautiful troublemaker pendejos...
August 17, 2021 at 3:36 PM
Hillbilly coco wanna be white is still alive. It means that a person can talk, can walk. Este idiota can't do that, maybe he's a plant or a weed. don't say you got a vaccine pinche idiota. Dumpster diver baboso.
Went to see this at another city . Great exhibit and it was a beautiful experience !!
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