LUMA Projection Arts Festival
The LUMA Projection Arts Festival is an annual event, typically held in early September, in Binghamton, NY focused on the art of projection mapping. LUMA'a first show was in 2015 with three installations and an audience estimated to be 20,000.[1] The LUMA Projection Arts Festival focuses on large, building-scale installations using a technique known as projection mapping, with the architecture of the city used as the canvas. It is the largest such festival in the United States focusing on this type of art. The conference has continued to expand each year, such as adding elements of interactive media in 2018.
LUMA Projection Arts Festival | |
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Genre | Conference and festival |
Dates | September (dates vary but generally are the weekend after Labor Day) |
Frequency | Annual |
Location(s) | Binghamton, New York, U.S. |
Years active | 8 |
Inaugurated | 2015 |
Founders | Joshua Ludzki, Tice Lerner, Nick Rubenstein |
Next event | September 2023 |
Attendance | 30,000 |
Website | lumafestival |
Each year, organizers debut several new animations designed to create the illusion that the neighborhood’s buildings are altering their physical structure. The festival presents additional live elements as a part of the projected works, such as orchestral music, motion captured actors, and audience interactivity. Each of the animations play on a loop throughout the night, separated by short countdowns. Organizers encourage visitors to walk the festival at their own pace and experience it as they would an outdoor art gallery. The work is commissioned both from international and local artists.[2][3] Previous LUMA installations have included work with internationally recognized artists in cross-collaborative presentations, such as the 2016 debut of the first 3D animation of characters from the BC (comic strip) with featured work from Mason Mastroianni.[4] The COVID-19 pandemic prompted LUMA's organizers to break format in 2020, partnering with Opera Omaha and Tri-Cities Opera Company to present one of the first documented live-streaming virtual reality operas, a production of Kamala Sankaram's Miranda: A Steampunk Opera.[5][6] The festival returned to its original form the following year.[7]
References
- "How LUMA's Lights Will Tell a Worldwide Story". 30 August 2017.
- "Timeless Tales at Carnegie Library". 5 October 2017.
- "Meet Jesse Pelzar: Engineering Student by Day, LUMA Team Member by Night". 30 August 2017.
- "WOW FACTOR: How LUMA's Projections Come To Life". 26 August 2016.
- Phillips, Maya (29 September 2020). "Review: 'Miranda' Poses a Musical Mystery in Virtual Reality". The New York Times.
- Brodeur, Michael Andor (2 March 2021). "How a mannequin head could revolutionize how orchestras and audiences come together". The Washington Post.
- Hoeffner, Melissa Kravitz (28 July 2021). "An epic light festival is coming to New York this September". Time Out New York.