Digital Art Displays

From Haven Homes

Personal Displays

Each bedroom in Haven House and each apartment at Cloud Nine Studios has a 55-inch digital art display with a custom frame handmade from birdseye maple by a local master woodworker.

These can be used in several ways, with each successive method exhibiting more control and self-efficacy:

While these displays also function as televisions, their art display capabilities can substantially reduce television viewing, encouraging other more active pursuits instead.

This is because a normal television, when off, is not only a bland eyesore, but also a temptation. When humans see the large, dark, blank screen, we see an object in its unused and unrealized state, all too aware that its suboptimal appearance can be replaced with color and visual interest at the press of a button.

All television hardware and wires are located in equipment boxes and conduits inside the wall, leaving nothing exposed, and a custom wall panel far from the screen provides connectivity for external devices, if necessary. Between this method of installation, the matte finish screen, and the natural wood frame, when these displays are in art mode the illusion is very convincing. The device is perceived as a framed work of art, which is a fully realized and functional object that requires no further interaction, not a television begging to be turned on.

Digital Triptych

The living room at Haven House has a digital triptych—a collection of three screens that can display coordinated sets of images or a single image spread across all three screens.

The digital triptych is a major component of the Curated Spaces modality, as changing such a large and complex piece of art brings a dramatic change to the room, and the management software created for this project makes it quick and easy to make such changes regularly.

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