Popular Culture Review Vol. 26, No. 1, Winter 2015 | Page 97

irre para ble da m a g e to the mummie s th e mselv e s. A s a fre qu e nt mus e um visitor, I found this multi-m edia a ppro ach fa scin ating— a fre sh, intere sting w a y to exp erie nc e a fa miliar topic. Catalog for the current British MMuseum Ancient Lives exhibit. Virtual Visits A noth er are a in which som e muse ums chose to expand is the virtual tour world. W hile th e ide a o f a “virtual tour” se e ms fairly obvious, in fa ct versions of this option vary wid ely in terms of wh at mus e um material the y include, how th e vie w er can move around the mus e um virtually, and so on. If on e google s “ P erg amon Virtual Tour," for exa mple, do z e ns of pa ge s of tours pop up from differe nt, unofficial tour comp a nie s and sites. T h ere are onlin e re positorie s of third-p arty virtual tours for most m ajor muse ums be yond wh at e a ch institution de signs and offers itself—and intere stingly, th e s e are larg ely fre e. Y et the bro ad c ate gories here are quite differe nt. S om e sites allow visitors to re plic ate a physica l visit by dra gging the vie w of the room in a 360-d e gre e manner, with th e adde d b e n efit of zooming in to artworks for more d etail tha n a physical visit could offer (se e im a ge s below). Virtual curation, or the progra mm atic w a y of conve ying inform ation a bout obje cts including dates, country/culture of origin, d ate of acquisition, is fairly sta ndard. O bje cts in colle ctions a v aila ble via virtual re ality are a ccompa nie d by inform ation identical to th e physical arra ng e m e nt. 93