An
EU-led initiative plans to virtually restore the
artefacts damaged by ISIS at Iraq’s Mosul Museum. Using crowd-sourced images to
recreate lost and destroyed items, researchers hope that these 3D ‘virtual
museums’ will aid efforts to identify and track down looted items.
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| Screen shot of the video released by Islamic State (Image: YouTube) |
The project website reads: “We assume that much of the museum's contents
were looted, and anything small enough to be easily removed will be appearing
soon on the antiquities market. Anything too large to remove for sale, appears
to have met a violent end at the hand of ISIS extremists. In both cases, it is
possible to virtually recreate the lost items through the application of
photogrammetry and crowdsourcing. Given enough photographs, digital or scans of
analogues, it is possible to reconstruct the artefacts and create digital
surrogates of those artefacts. This provides two immediate benefits: helping to
identify looted items and recreating destroyed items.”
Importantly, the project team also points out
the importance of keeping the memory of these objects and their meaning alive,
rather than seeing virtual reconstruction as an end in itself. For communities
faced with loss of their cultural heritage, this project will provide a tool to
preserve, disseminate and re-engage with their history.
However, the Mosul Museum has been closed
since the outbreak of the Iraq war in 2003, meaning that relevant images can prove
very difficult to locate. Pictures of the destroyed museum objects, including
Assyrian and Hatrene artefacts, will be retrieved from Open Access repositories
of FLICKR and PICASA, the EU digital library Europeana and anyone else willing
to contribute images of their own. These 3D reconstructions will then be
presented in an online museum where the data will be freely accessible to the
public.
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Reconstruction of lion statue destroyed by the Islamic State
(Image: ingg/Sketchfab) |
The team is calling on volunteers to help
them with a variety of tasks: finding photos, processing data, contributing to
the website and generally helping out with organising the effort to identify
the museum artefacts.
To get involved, visit the Project Mosul website:
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Posted By Marian to
Art and Artifice on 4/27/2015 04:35:00 p.m.