Chance Coughenour: How your pictures can help reclaim lost history
Chance Coughenour: Hogyan segíthetnek fotóink az elveszett történelem visszaszerzésében?
Chance Coughenour is recreating heritage and culture that's been lost throughout the world. Full bio
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destroy cultural heritage?
kulturális örökségünket az emberek?
they're erasing our history?
cultural heritage to erosion
that is simply difficult to avoid.
how we can use pictures --
hundreds of statues and artifacts
s tárgyi leletre bukkantak
were found in fragments,
darabokban találták,
a knee-length tunic
at this particular piece,
was elaborately decorated,
performing his religious functions.
betöltő király szobra.
opened in 1952 in northern Iraq,
Múzeum 1952-es megnyitásakor
for future generations.
őket a jövő nemzedékeknek.
of Iraq in 2003,
were relocated to Baghdad,
Bagdadba vittek át,
a video was released,
familiar in the video?
using innovative technology
akik innovatív technológiát használunk
that were taken of these artifacts
összegyűjthetnénk a tárgyakról
into a virtual museum
called Project Mosul.
I showed you before?
előbb mutatott fényképre?
reconstruction of it
készült rekonstrukció,
is called photogrammetry,
to use two-dimensional images
kétdimenziós fényképekből
from different angles
this sounds like magic -- but it's not.
of the same statue.
between the photographs --
rekonstruálni a tárgyat.
to reconstruct the object in 3D.
when each image was taken,
amelyből a felvételek készültek,
reconstruction, I admit,
was positioned against a wall.
taken of it from the back.
digital reconstruction of this statue,
teljessé szeretném tenni,
with crowdsourced images.
crowdsourcinges fényképekkel.
of all parts of the statue,
Michelangelo's David interesting,
tán páran érdekesnek találják,
the Mosul Museum in mind.
something that would grow so quickly.
hogy ilyen gyors hatást kelt.
to lost heritage anywhere.
bárhol megsemmisült örökségre is.
the name of the project to Rekrei.
nevét Rekreire változtatjuk.
folyóirat média laborja
reached out to us.
to build a virtual museum
a virtuális múzeumot,
the initial dream of that project.
RecoVR Mosul on your phone,
from the virtual museum.
completed by our project.
első rekonstrukció.
the Lion of Mosul being destroyed,
Moszul oroszlánja elpusztítását,
of large artifacts being destroyed
tárgyi leletek elpusztítására,
to have been stolen.
hogy elrabolhassák őket.
reconstruction from before,
amikor még állt,
during the destruction.
a szíriai Palmirában
are primarily the main focus
doesn't offer a straightforward solution
nem a legjobb megoldás
an addition to tell that story.
esélyt ad története elmondására.
that have been printed in color,
színesen vannak nyomtatva,
simply to hold the statues up.
összefogása végett került rá.
if you visit a museum,
szobrot összeillesztik,
for the people to see it.
has to offer for lost heritage.
az elveszett örökség helyett.
of one of the tower tombs
megmutathatjuk,
three parts of the exterior of the tomb,
külső oldalát rekonstruáltuk,
a reconstruction of the wall
for many, many years,
drawing plans of this lost heritage.
az építészeti tervrajzok is.
cultural heritage to areas of conflict
nemcsak konfliktusövezetekben
of Durbar Square in Kathmandu,
Durbar tér 3D-s modellje
that occurred last April ...
with only tourist photographs,
készítettem a 3D-s modellt,
organizations and private industry
s a magánszféra képes együttműködni
for initiatives like ours.
of our project, really,
before something happens, right?
bekövetkezte előtti fotókat föllelje.
with millions of images, right?
tartalmazó adatbázisnak tekinthető.
ki Flickr-féle honlapokról
from websites like Flickr,
heritage to natural disasters and in war,
és háborúk miatt veszítjük el
to something else.
hanem más miatt is.
at these two pictures?
destruction by human stupidity.
rombolás példájává vált.
wanted to climb onto this statue
föl akart mászni e szoborra,
reconstruction of this.
isn't a recent phenomenon.
elpusztítása nem mai jelenség.
thousands of Maya books in the Americas,
ezerszámra égettek el maja könyveket;
the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan.
a bámijáni Buddhákat Afganisztánban.
is about our shared global history.
Földünk közös történelme.
with our ancestors and their stories,
őseinkkel és történelmükkel,
every day to natural disasters
is the most heartbreaking loss ...
a legszívfacsaróbb veszteség,
to preserve the memory of the people
hogy a jövendő nemzedéknek
the history that is being lost.
lévő történelem helyreállításához.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Chance Coughenour - Digital archaeologistChance Coughenour is recreating heritage and culture that's been lost throughout the world.
Why you should listen
Chance Coughenour enjoys the innovations made possible by uniting science and archaeological research, which was part of the inspiration in the founding of Rekrei. His previous work on a EU-funded project connected him with Matthew Vincent, an archaeologist and web developer, who together launched Rekrei (formally Project Mosul) on March 8 of 2015 after witnessing the destruction of heritage in northern Iraq. Their open-source, volunteer initiative strives for the digital reconstruction of lost heritage using crowdsourced images and photogrammetry, the process of using 2D images to create 3D models.
From the start, Rekrei aimed to crowdsource the virtual reconstruction of the destroyed objects in the Mosul Cultural Museum and eventually release a virtual museum to digitally preserve its memory. This has already been accomplished thanks to the Economist Media Lab. The project has also expanded globally and continues to increase its activities thanks to our growing collaboration with public and private organizations, all of which has been achieved without any funding resources to date. The key ingredient to Rekrei is the online platform, which provides a simple user interface for identifying locations of destroyed heritage, uploading and sorting images, and a 3D gallery of completed reconstructions.
Coughenour has worked on research projects throughout Europe and the Americas. One of which is demonstrated in the documentary Scanning the End. He is a PhD candidate at the Institute for Photogrammetry at the University of Stuttgart. Coughenour joined Google Arts & Culture where he coordinates cultural heritage preservation efforts on a global scale. He's responsible for organizing partnerships and leading projects which employ emerging technology for cultural heritage documentation, dissemination and education.
Chance Coughenour | Speaker | TED.com