• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Stereoscopic Film on Pre-revolutionary Russia to Be Shown in Moscow

The HSE MIEM 3D Visualization and Computer Graphics Laboratory worked alongside the Sergei Chelnokov Foundation to create a slide film based on the stereoscopic photographs of Russian photographers working at the turn of the 20th century. A viewing of the film will take place on October 18th as part of the exhibition From the Belle Époque to Revolution – the History of Russia through sterophotography 1880–1917 in 3D.

The film The Person with the Stereocamera brings together for the first time ever previously unexhibited photographs from the archives of Sergei Chelnokov, Nikolai Shilov, Petr Postnikov, Alexander Karzinkin, Petr Vtorov, and Vladimir Shukhov, all of whom captured the life of the epoch from different angles, at times during the most dramatic of historical circumstances. ‘Today we have the unique opportunity of seeing the world through the eyes of people who lived at that distant time,’ the successor of Sergei Chelnokov’s archive, Dmitry Novikov, says. ‘It would seem that reproducing permanently lost stereoscopic photographs of the past has become possible thanks to contemporary 3D projection technologies. The film shows the direct experience of a person capable of seeing and thinking with the help of a stereocamera.’

All of the photographs in the film were digitised and put into a single storyline – Russia before 1917 – at the HSE 3D Visualization and Computer Graphics Laboratory. They were also set to music. There is no text on the images so as not to bother the audience’s perception of the photographs. The film allows viewers to use special virtual reality glasses to dive into the atmosphere of pre-revolutionary Russia – from the laying of the tram tracks and the first airplane flights to the technical miracles of the Exposition Universelle in Paris and significant social events such as the opening of the Nikolai Gogol Monument in Moscow. Particularly important are the portraits of contemporaries who have made a great contribution to Russian science and culture.

After the film, a round table will be held on ‘Visual History and Memory,’ in which HSE instructors will participate.

‘The area of the exhibition is split up into three zones – one with classic stereoscopes to view the “3D photographs,” one to view slide films, and an interactive zone where visitors can use a special mobile application that uses augmented reality to view stereo-photographs through smartphone-based 3D helmets,’ notes HSE MIEM Laboratory of 3D Imaging and Computer Graphics Lead Engineer Alexey Rolich. ‘Also at the last zone, you can use your mobile camera to recognize photographs and get all of the information you need on a specific image. For guests’ convenience, the exhibition also has mobile phones available to the public, as well as 3D helmets (a stereoscope analogue).’

Andrey Ignatov, a graduate of HSE MIEM’s undergraduate programme in Fundamental Informatics and Information Technologies, is the developer of the mobile application. The app shows users both plain photographs, as well as original stereopairs (if the user has virtual reality glasses). In addition, the app provides information on the photos and allows users to learn more about the Chelnokov Foundation for the Conservation of Photographic Heritage. The app is available for free on iOS and Android and devices.

Exhibition Date: September 10 – December 9; film screening at 7:00 p.m. on October 18

Exhibition Location: Exhibition Hall at 273 Gostiny Dvor, 4 Ilyinka Street

Organisers: Manezh Association together with the Higher School of Economics, the Chelnokov Foundation for the Conservation of Photographic Heritage, and the Istoria Otechestva Foundation.

Stereoscopic photography at the turn of the 20th century was both a form of leisure and a way of searching for new photographic expression. This is due to the fact that it was somewhat easier to work with a stereocamera than with large-format devices. They were also substantially cheaper. Stereoscopic photography was the first step made in the history of amateur photography that resulting in a transition from static images to moving objects, while also bringing everyday life to photography. Over the course of more than half a century of stereoscopic photography’s existence, cameras changed, stereopairs started photographing on metallic records and glass, and printing took place on paper. But the main principle remained the same – when creating a stereoscopic photograph for every eye, it was necessary to make a separate image by photographing an object from two different points. The distance between these points could vary between 10 and 20 centimetres. In order to capture the effect of depth, one had to have an additional binocular device for viewing, i.e., a stereoscope. A stereopair was installed here, and every eye was able to see the corresponding image, which allowed for a stereoscopic effect to be achieved.

See also:

Stella Art Foundation Exhibition Featuring Works of HSE Art and Design School Teachers to Last until May 26

The Stella Art Foundation has launched the exhibition 'About All the Things That Live There’ by Curator of the Master’s track ‘Video Art’ at HSE Art and Design School Alexandra Mitlyanskaya, Coordinator of the ‘Photography’ track at HSE Art and Design School Evgenia Solomatina, as well as artist Nina Kotel. The project is curated by Alexey Korsi.

Exhibition by HSE Art and Design School Students Now Open at Fabrika Centre

The Fabrika Centre for Creative Industries is hosting a graduation exhibition by bachelor’s students of Contemporary Art at the HSE Art and Design School. In the exhibition titled ‘Freedom of Absurdity’, the early-career artists present their interpretations of melancholy. The exhibition is open to visitors until April 21, 2024, and admission is free of charge.

Imprint: An Open Competition for Photographers

The ‘Photography’ educational track of the HSE Art and Design School is launching an online magazine called Imprint. The magazine will focus on collecting, summarising, and making sense of information about modern photography in Russia. The school will support talented photographers and offer them a platform for creating, developing, and uniting.

‘Winnie-the-Pooh and All, All, All’. Poster Exhibition of Graduates of HSE Art and Design School

Until March 15, the exhibition ‘Winnie-the-Pooh and All, All, All’ will be held in the Children's and Youth Department of the Central City Youth Library named after M.A. Svetlov. Graduates of the continuing education programme ‘Illustration. Basic Course’ decided to take a fresh look at A. A. Milne's beloved fairy tale by drawing incredibly colourful posters.

‘Our Exhibition Is an Attempt to Meet the Challenge of Conceptualism in the Most Radical Form’

On January 18–February 4, 2024, the philosophy and contemporary art exhibition ‘Exercises in Conceptualism’ took place at the Gallery Na Peschanoy (part of the Moscow City Galleries Network). The event posed a philosophical question about the phenomenon of conceptualism through the study of the artistic, institutional, epistemological (cognitive) and ontological (existential) status of explication, an important and little-studied element of modern art.

‘It’s Important to Combine Painting with Modern Technology’

On January 19, the HSE ART GALLERY hosted the opening of a new exhibition, ‘Majors, Minors. Aftertone’, which will last until March 10. The exhibition features works created by students of the HSE Art and Design School as part of their courses on modern painting and creating art projects using photography and neural networks. The exhibition was curated by artists and teachers Olga Chernysheva, Vladislav Efimov, as well as art critic Nicolas Audureau.

Fashion for Strong Women: Emancifashion Exhibition Takes Place at HSE University

In early November, the Emancifashion exhibition, dedicated to the representation of women in art and fashion, took place at HSE University in Maly Trekhsvyatitelsky Pereulok. The event, organised by first-year students from the HSE Media Communications programme, featured works created by students from the Fashion Design programme of the HSE Art and Design School.

Moving in Circles or Breaking Out: New Exhibition at HSE ART GALLERY

From September 18 to November 19, the HSE ART GALLERY is hosting a new exhibition from the HSE Art and Design School: ‘Going Over Old Ground?’ Its curator is Alexandra Mitlyanskaya, artist and head of the Screen Arts and Video Art tracks at the HSE Art and Design School. Guests will see experimental cinema, video art, and animation created by students and graduates of the school.

‘Light and Air’ Exhibition of HSE Art and Design School Opens at Arkhangelskoye Museum

On May 17, the ‘Light and Air’ group exhibition project was opened by students of the HSE Art and Design School at the Arkhangelskoye Museum Estate. The exhibits created by the university’s contemporary artists in training reflect on how people are connected with nature. The exhibition is open until July 9.

‘Screen Arts. Roll Call’ Exhibition of the HSE Art and Design School Opens in Kaliningrad

The ‘Screen Arts. Roll Call’ cultural and educational project of the HSE Art and Design School will be exhibited at the Baltic branch of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Kaliningrad until July 16, 2023. The project is a continuation of an HSE ART GALLERY exhibition held in September 2022. The exhibition presents a dialogue between three generations: pioneers of video art in Russia, young classicists, and students of the HSE Art and Design School who are uncovering new possibilities in screen arts.