Projects
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Archaeological artifacts from the Presidio of San Francisco reawaken in this versatile and enlightening Web site.
Mysteries surrounding animals and environments from the past are unraveled through these two activity-based interactives.
A triptych of interactive touch screens connect three specimen groupings with stories revealing their shared evolutionary origins, challenges, and adaptations.
A large-scale animated history of shifting boundaries in the southwest sets the stage for in-depth exploration of New Mexico’s political, cultural, and geographical landscapes.
Historic photographs, an environmental sound installation, and an interactive guest book transports visitors into the past to learn about the spectacular history of the Marion Davies Guest House.
A dynamic timeline serves up an archive of images to tell the story of Oregon’s history in diverse, personalized presentations.
An interactive, birds-eye view of Max Yasgur’s farm allows groups of visitors to explore the events that unfolded at the Woodstock Festival over three days.
A three-part suite of installations paint the soundscapes of music that preceded, defined, and descended from the Woodstock Festival.
Highlights from the International Quilt Study Center’s remarkable collection of quilts illustrate the evolution of an art form in this online and on-site interactive timeline.
Two large, motion graphics presentations outline the major battles of the Civil War before and after the Battle of Gettysburg.
In three different galleries, each focusing on one day in the Battle of Gettysburg, these interactive maps provide detailed data on Union and Confederate troops and their field locations.
Two animated map presentations break down the complex military strategies and sequences of every major battle of World War I.
The arts of the cultures of the ancient Mediterranean are contextualized in this large, interactive timeline-map installation at the Getty Villa.
A Web site explores the Chesapeake Bay—important to John Smith, Powhatan, Pocahontas, and the Jamestown colonists, as well as today’s inhabitants—revealing one of America’s most renowned and vital waterways.
Through a comprehensive database of images and objects connected to an interactive map of the plantation and a navigable 3-D recreation of the home, this Web site brings the experience of being at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello to life online.
This online exhibition explores every American war through the Smithsonian’s comprehensive collection of American military artifacts.
The simulators, 3-D models, images, animations, data, and diagrams in this Web site help audiences understand the science behind the earth’s most violent natural events.
An animated 3-D map with narration provides context to the Signal Corps photographs that document the Allies’ path from Normandy to Austria, from D-Day to VE-Day—the end of WWII combat in Europe.
A powerful collection database drives this online exhibition of American transportation history filled with interconnected pathways, games, and learning resources.
Interactive maps, measured drawings, and models of every tomb in the Valley of the Kings interconnect thousands of photographs, illustrations, and exhaustive research in this new standard for archeological publishing.
This compelling site provides unparalleled context for understanding the sequence of events, their corresponding locations, and first-person stories that defined the U.S. entrance into World War II.
From Edison to Public Enemy, from gramophones to digital sampling, this interactive tells the epic story of the innovations that transformed how we create and experience music.
A Web site’s map-based interface contextualizes the 3,304 photographs captured every mile from a car traveling from New York to San Francisco.
Geographical and historical context surround the epic photographs on this site, which document an ill-fated yet legendary Antarctic journey.