Following up on the RIGA IFF GOES VR hackathon in September 2019, Žanis Lipke Memorial continued working with the winning team of students (Ieva Vīksne, Līga Vēliņa, Kaspars Lēvalds, Lauris Taube) on developing the Lipke Bunker VR prototype. A story about the secret kept by a 8 years old boy Zigis, the son of the towering figure among rescuers of Jews under the Nazi occupation in Latvia, Žanis Lipke and his wife Johanna.
In November 2020, the first iteration of the Lipke Bunker VR was presented to a select group of young adults and XR experts. The positive feedback we received spurned us on to keep developing this project. We reached out to the Minneapolis (U.S.) based Creative Technologist at Fallon Worldwide, Cory McLeod and gauged his interest in consulting on the development of this project.
In May 2021, Fallon decided to partner with the Lipke Museum on a pro bono basis to develop the second iteration of the Lipke Bunker VR by the end of this year. A team of new media artists from Latvia, a Lipke Museum researcher and a team from Fallon have been working on the development of a presentational prototype. The intent of this prototype is to employ it as a proof-of-concept like object in a pitch to VR content development stakeholders and Holocaust education institutions. The 2021 RIGA IFF has opened up an opportunity to present our work-in-progress to industry leaders in the space where this project had its origin.
In the first sprint of the project, we focused on developing the core story of the bunker space in Kipsala as seen from Zigis’ perspective. The current development of the project augment the scope of perspectives to include the stories of those people whom Lipke helped evade the Holocaust. This augmentation of multiple perspectives and stories is intended to create a non-linear interactive experience, which captures the scale of the effect Lipke efforts during the Holocaust. We are currently developing the story of a family from Berlin, Hanna and Sofia Stern. The Sterns were deported from Berlin to Riga in 1942 and were able to escape from the Kaiserwald Concentration Camp in one of Lipke’s most challenging rescue operations.
Raivis is a co-founder of Creative Museum, a Riga based think tank focusing on museums and creative economies. He holds a Ph.D. in Museum studies from the University of Leicester with specialization in contemporary history. In 2018 he joined Žanis Lipke Memorial, an award-winning memorial museum in Riga, to work on development of its new civic education centre with an emphasis on digital programming. As a research fellow at the University of Latvia he is interested in memorial museums and dark tourism.
Līga is a media artist, illustrator & graphic designer based in Riga, Latvia. She is working with various digital media: data visualization, virtual reality, 3D art, video art. Līga studied New Media art at Liepaja University, and Visual communication at Art Academy of Latvia from where she graduated with an MA. Her professional awards include: 2020 2ND PLACE in Women in Tech 1st Hackathon in Riga (Winning Team members: Līga Vēliņa, Ieva Vīksne, Elizabete Dikmane) and 2019 DELFI CAMPUS AWARD – RIGA IFF GOES VR / 24h MAGNETIC LATVIA Hackathon – Team The Livingroom.
Ieva is a new media artist from Riga, Latvia. She holds a BA in New Media Art & History and is currently studying towards an MA in VR and smart technologies at the Vidzeme University. Experienced in VR & AR through different art related projects, Ieva is interested in topics connected to human experience, feminism, self-representation and mental health.
Cory is a creative technologist and interdisciplinary artist, whose work has spanned the performing arts, film, television, communication arts and new media art. He studied Theatre, Film and Television studies at the University of Cologne in Germany and holds a Post Graduate Diploma in African Studies and an MA in Theatre and Performance from the University of Cape Town in South Africa. His work has received national and international awards and has been featured in such publications as Fast Company and the New York Times. He is currently a Creative Technologist at Fallon Worldwide and has done work for clients such as Target, Boston Scientific, Saucony and Arby’s.