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Museums Journal
April 2005
"Roger Mann, the director of Casson Mann, the project’s
designer says: 'From the outset, the brief was to be the best
that a 21 st - century museum could be; not a theme park or a
Maddame Tussauds, but a magical experience with the technology
hidden. Some museums are overt about the technology, but we aimed
to make a connection with Churchill and the Churchill archive.'
The centrepiece of the 929sq metre
space is a 15 - metre long interactive timeline table, an illuminated ‘virtual filing
cabinet’ containing scanned material from the Churchill
archive. Using a touch-pad navigation system, similar to that
used on a laptop computer, the visitor can trace Churchill’s
life and career through chronologically arranged ’virtual’ folders.
Clicking on a folder opens it to reveal electronic facsimiles
of letters, enlargeable photographs, audio snippets and other
historical documents." |
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Museums Practice Magazine
Summer 2005
"The lifeline offers extensive
information about Churchill in a technology sophisticated format
through an electronic 'filing cabinet' projected on to the
tabletop. Opening a particular file allows the visitor, as
far as possible, to see what Churchill was doing every year,
month and day, and places this information in the context of
world events. This installation is an extraordinary achievement:
in word-length the equivalent of a substantial book of 200,000
words, 1,150 images and 1,100 documents.
'Where this display differs from
the conventional shrine is in its dependence on varied and
frequently cutting-edge means of communication: not only the
lifeline but photographs, film, audiovisual effects, interactives
and a wide range of sounds. Technically the result is highly
impressive…" |