JOSEPH KLIBANSKY
IN LONDON MAYFAIR
MAKE YOUR EVENT READY
FOR THE FUTURE! WHAT IS
AUGMENTED REALITY?
The future is coming much faster than we think. Nowadays,
events need to do more than just present new catalogues
and the latest offerings. EuropeanLife already presented
its storytelling magazine to attract visitors to your event,
create your own community and take them with you on
the journey of Luxury.
EuropeanLife is ready for the future, prepared to make your
event experiences even more real. We offer our partners
the possibility to work with augmented reality (AR) in
their event magazines. AR presents exciting opportunities
for brands and businesses to showcase their products in
new, innovative and dramatic 3D style. EuropeanLife has
the flexibility and capability to tailor augmented reality
projects for our customers’ specific needs. AR is technology that expands our physical world, adding
layers of digital information into it. Unlike Virtual Reality,
AR does not create entirely artificial environments to
replace reality with a virtual one. AR appears in direct
view of an existing environment, with added sounds,
videos, and graphics.
The idea for using augmented reality apps is simple:
You, as the event’s owner or exhibitor, can add links, video,
images, or stories to your article in your customised event
magazine. This makes it possible to show your product or
services in many different ways, bringing clients closer to
your product. Event visitors are able to download the app
and enjoy this new information in real time while walking
around the event—a fabulous tool to expand your event
and bring it in to the future!
Thinking about how to stay ahead of your competition?
Contact us today to start building your own customised
AR projects:
[email protected]
oseph Klibansky is an emerging artist based in
Amsterdam. His work examines the relationship
between a thing and its essence, between
what we see and what an image implies. Using
a process of figurative and abstract layering
Klibanksy’s large-scale idealistic paintings explore
perception by compressing time and space,
resulting in something that at first appears
joyous, often descending into bleak melancholy.
www.thehouseoffineart.com
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