Art’s Got Heart – and Galleries Have the Technology to Prove It
by Lee Rickwood
Technology enables the presentation of great art; it can also show us how art affects our hearts and minds.
by Lee Rickwood
Technology enables the presentation of great art; it can also show us how art affects our hearts and minds.
by Lee Rickwood
The Aga Khan Museum’s new major exhibition, Light: Visionary Perspectives, explores how light has shaped history, culture and certainly, technology.
by Lee Rickwood
The exhibit lies between technology and history; between the visual, aural and olifactory; between a tangible, physical experience and an imagined, creative dream world.
By Yasmin Ranade
Interactive experiences, both onsite and remote, are pivotal to the Aga Khan Museum’s mission and vision as we grow our impact both locally and globally. Our online offerings amplify our accessibility, which is at the heart of our commitment to ensuring art is within everyone’s reach.
by Lee Rickwood
Some of the most important teachings from the exhibition are highlighted using interactive technology. Digital audio and video convey Rumi’s original Persian writings and their various renderings over the centuries.
by Lee Rickwood
The Aga Khan Museum in Toronto is the first museum in Canada to appear on the Bloomberg Connects smartphone app, joining hundreds of international arts and cultural institutions.
By Yasmin Ranade
The Aga Khan Museum in Toronto has an ambitious and innovative slate of interactive programs designed to foster intercultural understanding and pluralism across differences, highlight interconnections between diverse cultures, and showcase breath-taking artistic creativity as a unique catalyst for topical conversations onsite and online.
By Yasmin Ranade
Featuring beautiful scrolls, books, manuscript paintings, and textiles dating from as far back as the 9th century CE, this exhibition challenges viewers to think of the book as a revolutionary technology that shaped — not just documented — transformative moments in human history.