Van Gogh: 'Technical glitches' delay UK projection premiere
- Published
The UK premiere of a projection display featuring the paintings of Vincent Van Gogh has been delayed due to "a few technical glitches".
The exhibition, at St Mary's Church in York, was due to start earlier, but has now been delayed, organisers said.
Creative director, Mario Iacampo, said the delay was due to issues with some of the "cutting edge technology" used to project the images onto the walls.
He was confident it would be fixed, and said the display will open on Monday.
"Although we have staged the exhibition in Naples and Brussels, and opened last week in Beijing, a few technical glitches mean that the experience isn't quite ready," Mr Iacampo said.
"We know from our previous outings that we can offer an experience that wows, and each time we use a new venue, we adapt the displays to complement the building.
"So (we) are planning to spend the weekend ironing out any glitches so it is perfect on Monday," he added.
Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience runs until January 2020 and features more than 200 animated paintings projected onto walls, floors and ceilings.
The 35-minute 360-degree projection tells the story of the Dutch 19th Century post-impressionist artist and his work.
Anyone with pre-booked tickets will receive a full refund, or can swap their tickets for a future date, Mr Iacampo said.
Vincent Van Gogh
Born in 1853 in the Dutch village of Zundert
Worked as an art dealer and took up painting himself in his 20s but struggled to sell his art
Cut off his own ear in 1888 and died from a gunshot wound in July 1890 in an apparent suicide
Produced more than 2,000 artworks including about 850 oil paintings
In the 20th Century he became regarded as one of the most influential figures in Western art
The auction record for a Van Gogh painting stands at $148.9m (£95m) for Portrait of Dr Gachet, which was sold in 1990
Follow BBC Yorkshire on Facebook, external, Twitter, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to yorkslincs.news@bbc.co.uk, external
All images copyrighted.
- Published12 June 2019
- Published27 March 2019
- Published5 June 2018
- Published17 January 2018