For Cultural Heritage Explorers

K-Heritage, Creating Value Through Digital Technology / Korea Heritage Service - Photo: Korea Heritage Service

Collection

For Cultural Heritage Explorers

Whether Egon Schiele’s haunting self-portraits, Van Gogh’s luminous sunflowers in digital close-up or hidden perspectives on St. Mary’s Cathedral – cultural heritage tells of the diversity of human forms of expression across time and continents. Treasures from Japan and Korea as well as works by forgotten artists are made newly accessible using state-of-the-art technologies. The festival invites you not only to look at history, but to bring it to life in ever new images, voices and spaces.

  • EGON SCHIELE—A Personal Encounter

    Gerda Leopold (AT), Sebastian Endler (AT), Michael Geidel (DE)

    This presentation offers an intimate view of Schiele’s life and art. We follow his journey through the strict academy, Klimt’s influence, his daring new style, and how Schiele portrayed himself and his models. His landscapes reflect a search for eternity. It ends with his final triumph during the war.

  • Fearless Women*: Immersive Narratives and Real Battles

    FIFTITU% (AT)

    Stories of women* who have fundamentally shaped the cultural and social fabric of Linz have largely disappeared from public memory. The AR-Walk addresses this issue with an innovative blend of remembrance and interactive play.

  • Japan’s cultural treasures and Van Gogh’s “Sunflowers”

    NHK and NHK Enterprises (JP)

    Japan’s cultural treasures like armor and ukiyo-e are recreated in UHD 3DCG, revealing various new insights and emotions. Van Gogh’s Sunflowers in UHD 3DCG showcases the master’s brilliant techniques in stunning detail.

  • K-Heritage, Creating Value Through Digital Technology

    Korea Heritage Service (KR)

    This project illuminates the beauty of Korea’s national heritage through digital media. It features the natural heritage designed by humans to engage with nature and live in harmony with it.

  • Mariendom Unveiled

    Michael Hager (AT)

    A virtual journey through St. Mary’s Cathedral brings Austria’s largest church to life digitally, revealing new perspectives on its architecture, artworks, and stained-glass windows.

  • Through the Magnifying Glass

    National Gallery of Art (US), Eve Straussman-Pflanzer (US)

    As the National Gallery of Art adds more works by early women artists to its collection, what are we learning about these relatively understudied painters? Explore three works in remarkable detail and discover how the museum’s studies add to our understanding of each artist’s process and life.