photo: David Castenson
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
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seen from China
seen from United States
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seen from United States
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seen from Australia
photo: David Castenson
NPF Test 6: Заголовок
Текст перед первой картинкой
Текст между картинками
Текст после второй картинки
Multi-Image Reasoning
Image request: A visually striking composite image showing a single eye looking at a vast field of scattered images. The overall feel should be one of searching for something valuable within complexity. The world isn’t experienced through single snapshots; it unfolds in sequences and relationships, a constant flow of visual information. Current AI systems, particularly those excelling at Visual…
Quality - 15 projector multi-image slide show
Here is a 15 projector, 5-screen slideshow which outwardly appears to be a documentary or travelogue about a restoration project in Bangkok. I believe the show was indeed presented to an audience IN Bangkok. However it is also an admonishment to the audience to do better, higher "quality" work, etc., just like the folks in the show. Oof. It makes use of 5 screen collages, which is somewhat unusual, as well as more common panaramas of different widths. Pretty! This module was created by Wilden Enterprises of New York City and kept safe over the years by Paul Vershbow.
Shaping Tomorrow - 15 projector multi-image slide show
Here's a really nice example of the medium of multi-image! The 15 slide projectors that are used to create the images you see here have been put to full use!
This is the five-screen version of "Shaping Tomorrow" - on this channel you can also find a single screen version of this show, driven by six projectors focused on one screen area. They were both used as generic rental slide modules, and the version used was decided by the format of the show at hand.
This module was created by Wilden Enterprises of New York City and kept safe over the years by Paul Vershbow.