You examine objects in the environment, keep a few items in your inventory, go through conversation trees, and solve puzzles.
Not exact matches
Finding items of interest
in the
environment is as simple as wandering around and clicking on things when they pop - up, but when
examining something such as a desk with numerous
objects you'll get a close - up view and a cursor which lights up when hovering above something that can be checked out.
Both games are played from a first - person perspective, aided only by a lantern,
in an ominous
environment filled to the brim with interactive
objects and contraptions to
examine and manipulate.
Visitors are invited to observe airborne and earthbound geometric constructions saturated
in bright colours;
examine his Bólides (Fireballs), interactive composite
objects filled with sand and other substances, which were intended to be handled by viewers; dance samba
in one of his Parangolés, capes designed by the artist to be worn by the public; play billiard on a pool table that is supposed to send you back to the atmosphere of Vincent Van Gogh's painting The Night Cafe; and experience immersive exotic or unfamiliar
environments, as
in his installations Tropicália (1967) and Eden (1969).
Metaphorically these transitions
in context and form align themselves conceptually with my interests
in examining the way we experience culture,
objects and physical
environments.
The exhibition
examines the role of designed
objects that define and animate our interior
environments, featuring contemporary furniture and furnishings by recent alumni and Artists -
in - Residence of Cranbrook Academy of Art.
Organized by the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, this exhibition
examines recent African art according to two fluid and often intertwined aesthetic and conceptual frameworks: the impact of the
environment on contemporary African life, and the use of found
objects and appropriated materials as a recurring presence
in current African art.
Environment and Object: Recent African Art examines recent African art according to two fluid and often intertwined aesthetic and conceptual frameworks: the impact of the environment on contemporary African life, and the use of found objects and appropriated materials as a recurring presence in current A
Environment and
Object: Recent African Art
examines recent African art according to two fluid and often intertwined aesthetic and conceptual frameworks: the impact of the
environment on contemporary African life, and the use of found objects and appropriated materials as a recurring presence in current A
environment on contemporary African life, and the use of found
objects and appropriated materials as a recurring presence
in current African art.
For example, infants need to interact with their
environment in a very physical way,
examining cause and effect relationships by touching and feeling
objects.