Inside Bruegel / Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien / The Tower of Babel / Pieter Bruegel, photo: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl

Cultural Heritage – A Virtual Retrospective 

Between three visually stunning dimensions on 16 x 9 meter projection surfaces on wall and floor, with 33 million pixel resolution and a high-performance laser tracking system, the future meets the past in Deep Space 8K. Nowhere else are images staged as impressively as here. This is also where you can view the details of world-famous art and cultural treasures in a way that would probably have remained hidden from you forever in analog reality.

Between three visually stunning dimensions on 16 x 9 meter projection surfaces on wall and floor, with 33 million pixel resolution and a high-performance laser tracking system, the future meets the past in Deep Space 8K. Nowhere else are images staged as impressively as here. This is also where you can view the details of world-famous art and cultural treasures in a way that would probably have remained hidden from you forever in analog reality.

The cultural heritage that Deep Space 8K has the honor of hosting is remarkable: Leonardo da Vinci, Pieter Bruegel or Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Egon Schiele or Lucas Cranach, the Cheops Pyramid in Giza, the Venus of Willendorf or the Saliera, sacred art from Austria or a 3D reconstruction of Venice. During the Ars Electronica festival, we invite art and culture enthusiasts to immerse themselves virtually in a newly curated selection of works.