5:00 pm - Friday, October 27

A World Fair Gone Digital: Turin 1911 Project

Mosaic Hall room 113, UCSD, San Diego, 92037

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Join us for a journey back in time as we launch the next phase of the Turin 1911 Project: a newly designed, interactive website that allows viewers to step into the captivating world of the 1911 World's Fair in Turin, Italy.

In a groundbreaking partnership bridging the humanities and sciences, project researchers from UC San Diego and Politecnico di Torino will tell the history of the Turin 1911 Project, explaining how the hundreds of rare and original materials – as well as the 3D reconstructions of the buildings themselves – can be used today, digitally.

In its impressive breadth, the project provides a case study to understand complex processes of nation-formation and imperial control, as well as the massive economic investment and the shifting political alliances that occurred in the World’s Fair arenas during the tumultuous times preceding World War I.

The project’s unprecedented scope also shines a light on forgotten stories, including those of the daily laborers, specialized workers, women, colonized peoples and ethnic minorities, on whose backs these fairs were built.

Speakers:

- Cristina Della Coletta, UC San Diego School of Arts and Humanities
- Filiberto Chiabrando, Politecnico di Torino
- Alessandra Spreafico, Politecnico di Torino
- Opening remarks by Dominique Rissolo of the Qualcomm Institute’s Cultural Heritage Engineering Initiative

About the Turin 1911 Project
Though World's Fairs were among the West's largest mass-attended events during the 19th and 20th centuries, they were also ephemeral occurrences designed to exhibit, rather than preserve, the changing world of modernity. Turin 1911 was no exception: once the fair was dismantled, its artifacts were scattered among institutional archives and private collectors, making it nearly impossible to be studied in a systematic manner. Until today.

The Turin 1911 Project is not only a physical and digital archive that collects and preserves thousands of exposition items into a widely accessible and searchable online archive. It is also the only existing digital project that combines the application of shared international standards for cataloging and controlled terms, with the virtual reconstruction of key areas of the Turin fairgrounds.

The project’s 3D models, all metrically controlled and inserted in the original context of the fairgrounds, are based on archival materials and constitute the closest rendition of the architectural structures that were dismantled soon after the fair closed its doors.

The Turin 1911 Project at UC San Diego represents the world’s largest physical and digital collection of materials dedicated to the 1911 World’s Fair. It is a collaborative interdisciplinary initiative between the UC San Diego School of Arts and Humanities, Cultural Heritage Engineering and Innovation Initiative (CHEI) at the Qualcomm Institute and Jacobs School of Engineering, and Italy’s Politecnico di Torino Laboratory of Geomatics for Cultural Heritage.

Location and Parking
Organizers highly recommend public transportation to UC San Diego. The closest parking structure to the Mosaic Building at the North Torrey Pines Living and Learning Neighborhood is Scholars Parking. Exit the parking structure via stair or elevator to the main courtyard of the neighborhood. The event location will be on the South side of the courtyard, directly below the UC San Diego Craft Center.

Admission/Cost: FREE Please Register

Location:
North Torrey Pines Living and Learning Neighborhood
Mosaic Hall room 113
UCSD
San Diego, CA 92037

Friday, October 27 - 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM