space
(En)close(d) Encounters of the Curiosities Named Artemis Ephesia
Zeynep Aktüre (Izmir Institute of Technology, Turkey)
At the archaeological museum in Selçuk, Turkey, the most popular displays are the two Ephesian Artemis statues that stand in niches at the longitudinal ends of a hall, in such a way as to invite Carol Duncan’s analysis of the modern museum as a ‘ritual space’ for aesthetic contemplation. However, Artemis Ephesia would not always seem to allow such a distanced encounter, at least not for those who are willing to perceive its simultaneous strangeness and familiarity.
“Marvelously Fine and Curiously Set Forth in Pictures”: Durham Cathedral and Computer Visualization as a Potential Research Tool
Pam Graves (Durham University, UK)
In Search of the Holy Cross: Reconstructing the Guild Chapel at Stratford-upon-Avon
Geoff Arnott (Heritage Technology, UK) and Kate Giles (University of York, UK)
Agency and Agents: Computer Simulation and the Potentiality of Late Medieval Sacred Space
Anthony Masinton (University of York, UK)
War Memorials: Attractive and Repulsive Foci for Modern Commemoration
Samuel Walls (University of Exeter, UK)