The Nasher Sculpture Center, in a partnership with the George W. Bush Presidential Center, will present the virtual reality exhibition CARNE y ARENA (Virtually present, Physically invisible), conceived by Academy Award-winning writer and director Alejandro G. Iñárritu.
The immersive experience is a 20-minute solo journey centered around a multi-narrative virtual reality sequence based on true accounts reenacted by Central American and Mexican refugees. It employs the highest virtual technology to create a large, multi-narrative light space with human characters. Lines between subject and bystander are blurred and bound together as visitors walk in a vast, sand-filled space and witness a fragment of a refugee’s personal journey.
The experience is located inside the Food & Fiber Pavilion at Fair Park.
The Nasher Sculpture Center, in a partnership with the George W. Bush Presidential Center, will present the virtual reality exhibition CARNE y ARENA (Virtually present, Physically invisible), conceived by Academy Award-winning writer and director Alejandro G. Iñárritu.
The immersive experience is a 20-minute solo journey centered around a multi-narrative virtual reality sequence based on true accounts reenacted by Central American and Mexican refugees. It employs the highest virtual technology to create a large, multi-narrative light space with human characters. Lines between subject and bystander are blurred and bound together as visitors walk in a vast, sand-filled space and witness a fragment of a refugee’s personal journey.
The experience is located inside the Food & Fiber Pavilion at Fair Park.
The Nasher Sculpture Center, in a partnership with the George W. Bush Presidential Center, will present the virtual reality exhibition CARNE y ARENA (Virtually present, Physically invisible), conceived by Academy Award-winning writer and director Alejandro G. Iñárritu.
The immersive experience is a 20-minute solo journey centered around a multi-narrative virtual reality sequence based on true accounts reenacted by Central American and Mexican refugees. It employs the highest virtual technology to create a large, multi-narrative light space with human characters. Lines between subject and bystander are blurred and bound together as visitors walk in a vast, sand-filled space and witness a fragment of a refugee’s personal journey.
The experience is located inside the Food & Fiber Pavilion at Fair Park.