3D mesh in .fbx format, textures embedded as .jpg of the exterior of the church in Lucklum. This is additionally captured 3D data converted to local coordinates, high quality mesh version with 15 mio. triangles and 8x8k textures. The data was professionally captured and processed by ArcTron 3D GmbH.
The interdisciplinary project RFB05 "The Interior of the Church in Lucklum: A Compendium of Early Modern European Emblematics" combines expertise from the fields of theology, literary and art history, materials science, and human-computer interaction to document and historically contextualize all inscriptions and emblem paintings inside the church for the very first time. This includes investigating how the 209 inscriptions and 156 paintings structure the church’s interior as a space of meditation and prayer. Moreover, the projects tests the non-invasive scanning of earlier. hidden layers with completely different paitings and inscriptions. Part of the project is an interactive immersive virtual reality application of the church in Lucklum, where users can explore all inscriptions and emblematic paintings in their spatial context.
The project belongs to the Research Field B “Inscribing Spaces” of the first phase (2019-2025) of the Cluster of Excellence “Understanding Written Artefacts”.
RFB05: The Interior of the Church in Lucklum: A Compendium of Early Modern European Emblematics
Book: Sinnbilder im Sakralraum: Die Kirche in Lucklum - Ein Kompendium der geistlichen Emblematik der Frühen Neuzeit
Project website department of Informatics, Human-Computer Interaction
Project Website 3D Data Scanning and Model Creation by ArcTron 3D
The project is supported by "Rittergut Lucklum" and "Güterverwaltung Reinau".
The research for this paper was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy – EXC 2176 'Understanding Written Artefacts: Material, Interaction and Transmission in Manuscript Cultures', project no. 390893796. The research was conducted within the scope of the Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC) at Universität Hamburg.