9/13/2023 0 Comments Beyond vango![]() To find out more and to view the map in more detail, visit Vango’s dedicatedġ.By sharing this new map, it is our hope that we will spotlight a very real concern about Scotland’s depleting outdoor space - and, ultimately, drive people and politicians to take action now.” Rob Birrell, Vango’s Marketing Director, commented, “Scotland is famous for its scenic wild places and uplifting sense of remoteness, but sadly some of our most beautiful wild camping spots and beaches are seriously at risk and shrinking. So I would encourage people to get out to these incredible sites - see them, appreciate them and understand that unless we take collective action, they could soon disappear.”ĭuring COP26, Mark Beaumont and Markus Stitz will be completing a gravel ride around Glasgow, to promote the benefits of seeing local areas in new ways, connecting with the outdoors through adventure. 2050 is not so far away, especially when I think of the lifetimes of my children and how they can enjoy the great outdoors. He said, “This map is a stark warning that the issue of climate change, and its impact on our precious outdoors, is very real. Mark Beaumont, the Scottish ultra adventure athlete who holds the Guinness World record for cycling around the world is a supporter for climate action, as well as being a long standing ambassador for Vango. Currently, the castle is accessed on foot at low tide, but is anticipated to be inaccessible from the land by 2100, along with the loss of local wild camping sites along the Ardnamurchan coast. The first image shows a sunken campsite and the second, one of Scotland’s most famous castles - Castle Tioram. Many more wild camping sites will shrink in area or disappear in the coming decades, as sea level continues to rise and climate change impacts accelerate.”Īs part of its awareness campaign, Vango has unveiled a series of creatively inspired CGI images depicting an imagined, dystopian sunken world beyond 2300. Larissa added, “The map is just a snapshot of some of the locations under threat - the tip of the iceberg. It is thus imperative that we act now to, in the first instance, achieve Net Zero (and beyond) rapidly and secondly, adapt society to better live with coastal climate change impacts like flooding and erosion.” Larissa Naylor, Professor of Geomorphology and Environmental Geography at the University of Glasgow, commented, “Even with Net Zero our sea levels will continue to rise and continue to erode key coastal assets like wild camping beaches and critical transport infrastructure. It is estimated that all of the featured locations will be under increased threat from rising sea levels and extreme weather conditions by 2050 and beyond. Īfter a tremendous success in Paris, Imagine Van Gogh travelled to North America, opening in Montreal in 2019, followed by Québec and Winnipeg in 2020 Vancouver, Edmonton, Saskatoon, and Boston in 2021 and Tacoma, Seattle (USA), Buenos Aires, (Argentina), Quito (Ecuador) and London (Ontario, Canadá) in 2022.The scientifically-backed map features some of Scotland’s most beautiful wild camping locations and areas of historic significance, including the sweeping sand dunes of Golspie Links in the Scottish Highlands, Lunan Bay in Angus, the unique beaches of South Coll, and the idyllic inlets on the Caithness coast, including Strathy and nearby Melvich. In 2017, Annabelle Mauger and Julien Baron presented in Halle de La Villette in Paris a new upgraded version in Image Totale © : Imagine Van Gogh. ![]() The creation was then copied and various digital Van Gogh exhibitions toured around the world. After a huge success in Cathédrale d’Images, the show was presented in 2011 at the ArtScience Museum in Singapore. ![]() In 2001, Annabelle Mauger joined the creative team and created the first Van Gogh immersive exhibition. The visitors were fully immersed in the paintings’ screenings through his new technique of Image Totale ©. He transformed there a former underground quarry into an immersive venue named Cathédrale d’Images. ![]() The very first art immersive exhibition was invented in 1977 by Albert Plécy, a French photographer, in Les Baux-de-Provence, South of France. ![]()
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