The Museumgoer podcast

"American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition"

26 min · 3 apr 2026
aflevering "American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition" artwork

Beschrijving

“American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition” has opened at the Historic New Orleans Collection and will remain on view through January 17, 2027. From the French technology company Histovery, the exhibition uses hand-held tablet computers to open up 360-degree views of the sites, events and historical figures who fought for America’s independence 250 years ago.  The HistoPads, as they’re called, are triggered at pedestals placed in front of several large-scale lightboxes that introduce each sequence, colonial Virginia to Boston to Philadelphia to Yorktown and so on.   The exhibit will feel familiar to anyone who visited the Histovery exhibit “Notre-Dame de Paris” when it visited HNOC a couple of years ago.  This is the exhibit’s US debut engagement, and it will tour for many years to many states.  I recently visited the exhibit with Jason Wiese, HNOC’s chief curator, who discussed the overall show and went into some detail about HNOC’s contribution, a concluding sequence about Spanish Governor Bernardo de Gálvez and his multicultural militia of free men of color, Acadians, Indigenous volunteers, and Spanish regulars which won a series of victories against the British along the Gulf Coast.  “American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition” is free, but timed tickets are required.  Read more and view some photos that accompany the conversation on the blog at themuseumgoer.com.

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aflevering “The First Piano Professors and Lost Music of Early New Orleans” artwork

“The First Piano Professors and Lost Music of Early New Orleans”

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aflevering “Amongst Ourselves: Resisting Slavery at Whitney Plantation” artwork

“Amongst Ourselves: Resisting Slavery at Whitney Plantation”

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aflevering “Holocaust Survivors in a New Land: The New Americans Social Club of New Orleans” artwork

“Holocaust Survivors in a New Land: The New Americans Social Club of New Orleans”

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aflevering "Come Back Fighting: USS New Orleans at War" artwork

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aflevering "American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition" artwork

"American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition"

“American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition” has opened at the Historic New Orleans Collection and will remain on view through January 17, 2027. From the French technology company Histovery, the exhibition uses hand-held tablet computers to open up 360-degree views of the sites, events and historical figures who fought for America’s independence 250 years ago.  The HistoPads, as they’re called, are triggered at pedestals placed in front of several large-scale lightboxes that introduce each sequence, colonial Virginia to Boston to Philadelphia to Yorktown and so on.   The exhibit will feel familiar to anyone who visited the Histovery exhibit “Notre-Dame de Paris” when it visited HNOC a couple of years ago.  This is the exhibit’s US debut engagement, and it will tour for many years to many states.  I recently visited the exhibit with Jason Wiese, HNOC’s chief curator, who discussed the overall show and went into some detail about HNOC’s contribution, a concluding sequence about Spanish Governor Bernardo de Gálvez and his multicultural militia of free men of color, Acadians, Indigenous volunteers, and Spanish regulars which won a series of victories against the British along the Gulf Coast.  “American Revolution: The Augmented Exhibition” is free, but timed tickets are required.  Read more and view some photos that accompany the conversation on the blog at themuseumgoer.com.

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