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An online exhibition, also referred to as a virtual exhibition, online gallery, cyber-exhibition, is an exhibition whose venue is cyberspace. Museums and other organizations create online exhibitions for many reasons. For example, an online exhibition may: expand on material presented at, or generate interest in, or create a durable online ...
A virtual tradeshow (or a virtual trade fair) is a virtual event run in an online environment hosted online for a limited period. It can be considered the online equivalent of a traditional tradeshow or exhibition, but exhibitors and visitors connect on the web rather than in person.
Virtual Museum of New France – online 1997. Established by the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. Asia Society Virtual Gallery – online 1998. Created for the exhibition "More Than Meets the Eye". [27] The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County – founded 1910, online 1998. The museum is the largest natural and historical ...
The virtual exhibition is scheduled to showcase behind-the-scenes photos, awards, a personal stage map with handwritten notes, a shooting script for the "Grandpa" music video and more.
A virtual museum is a digital institution dedicated to exhibiting objects and collections, similar to a physical museum, but existing entirely online. Virtual museum exhibitions utilize digital technologies to present collections and narratives in an online environment.
Banner for Wiki Loves Art Nouveau [239] Exhibition on Europeana. Many museums and arts organizations have created their own online data and virtual exhibitions. Some offer virtual 3-D tours similar to the Google Arts & Culture's gallery view, whereas others simply reproduce images from their collection on the institution's web page.
The Virtual Museum of Computing (VMoC), part of the Virtual Library museums pages, was created as a virtual museum providing information on the history of computers and computer science. [ 25 ] [ 26 ] [ 27 ] It included virtual "galleries" (e.g., on Alan Turing , curated by Andrew Hodges [ 27 ] ) and links to other computer museums .
The website is based on an online guide to library exhibits on the web, created by Andrea Bean Hough in 1995. The guide was maintained by the University of Houston Libraries until it had grown to some 350 links in 1998–99, and staffing considerations made it necessary for the university to discontinue participation in the project.