Marshmallow Laser Feast's 'In the Eyes of the Animal' virtual reality headset
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 Published On Nov 2, 2015

Visitors to an English forest were able to explore the woods through the eyes of different animals as part of a virtual reality experience by London design studio Marshmallow Laser Feast.

The In the Eyes of the Animal installation was designed for the Abandon Normal Devices Festival in Grizedale Forest.

Visitors were given globe-shaped virtual reality headsets decorated in moss and plants to wear. Digital art studio FIELD also designed unusual VR headsets for its Violescence solo exhibition in London.

A harness that fitted around the upper body vibrated to emphasise the experience's immersive three-dimensional sound.

While wearing the VR helmets, viewers experienced the landscape as if through the eyes of one of three woodland creatures: a dragonfly, a frog and an owl. Visuals created the illusion of soaring over the treetops or wandering the forest floor.

Marshmallow Laser Feast used data taken from LiDAR (remote sensing technology), CT scans and aerial drone filming to design the experience. It relies on a real-time system that visualises an artistic interpretation of how trees and plants might appear to the forest's animal inhabitants.

"We've always had a hunger for hacking people's senses by combining art and technology," said studio co-founder Barney Steel.

"In the Eyes of the Animals gave us chance to use VR as a first person perspective medium – the ultimate way to hack someone's senses."

Virtual reality – first introduced in the 1990s – was also used by art collective BeAnotherLab to give people the opportunity to swap genders, while fashion designer Gareth Pugh used the technology to create an experience at London department store Selfridges.
Read the full story on Dezeen: http://www.dezeen.com/?p=794170

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