Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

This week’s photo series comes from the students and alumni of NYU Shanghai. We’re looking at how people from China and around the world come to understand their new home via images.

Today’s photo comes from Kadallah Burrowes, who studied Interactive Media Arts at NYU Shanghai and continues to work in the city, exploring a conceptual practice related to narrative technique and UI design in virtual reality. The photo is of Leshan Giant Buddha in Sichuan province, which became the largest Buddha in the world after the Taliban bombed the Bamiyan Buddha in Afghanistan in 2001. Naturally, this being a tourist attraction in China, one can’t quite photograph the Leshan Giant Buddha without photographing someone else photographing the Leshan Giant Buddha.

Check back on Radii tomorrow for a profile of Burrowes and his most recent interactive media project in Shanghai. And check a previous photo of his — runner-up in our inaugural photo contest this past summer — here:

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Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

1 min read

This week’s photo series comes from the students and alumni of NYU Shanghai. We’re looking at how people from China and around the world come to understand their new home via images.

Today’s photo comes from Kadallah Burrowes, who studied Interactive Media Arts at NYU Shanghai and continues to work in the city, exploring a conceptual practice related to narrative technique and UI design in virtual reality. The photo is of Leshan Giant Buddha in Sichuan province, which became the largest Buddha in the world after the Taliban bombed the Bamiyan Buddha in Afghanistan in 2001. Naturally, this being a tourist attraction in China, one can’t quite photograph the Leshan Giant Buddha without photographing someone else photographing the Leshan Giant Buddha.

Check back on Radii tomorrow for a profile of Burrowes and his most recent interactive media project in Shanghai. And check a previous photo of his — runner-up in our inaugural photo contest this past summer — here:

NEWSLETTER

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Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

1 min read

1 min read

Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

This week’s photo series comes from the students and alumni of NYU Shanghai. We’re looking at how people from China and around the world come to understand their new home via images.

Today’s photo comes from Kadallah Burrowes, who studied Interactive Media Arts at NYU Shanghai and continues to work in the city, exploring a conceptual practice related to narrative technique and UI design in virtual reality. The photo is of Leshan Giant Buddha in Sichuan province, which became the largest Buddha in the world after the Taliban bombed the Bamiyan Buddha in Afghanistan in 2001. Naturally, this being a tourist attraction in China, one can’t quite photograph the Leshan Giant Buddha without photographing someone else photographing the Leshan Giant Buddha.

Check back on Radii tomorrow for a profile of Burrowes and his most recent interactive media project in Shanghai. And check a previous photo of his — runner-up in our inaugural photo contest this past summer — here:

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

RADII NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox

Feature image of Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

Photo of the day: Virtual Buddha

1 min read

This week’s photo series comes from the students and alumni of NYU Shanghai. We’re looking at how people from China and around the world come to understand their new home via images.

Today’s photo comes from Kadallah Burrowes, who studied Interactive Media Arts at NYU Shanghai and continues to work in the city, exploring a conceptual practice related to narrative technique and UI design in virtual reality. The photo is of Leshan Giant Buddha in Sichuan province, which became the largest Buddha in the world after the Taliban bombed the Bamiyan Buddha in Afghanistan in 2001. Naturally, this being a tourist attraction in China, one can’t quite photograph the Leshan Giant Buddha without photographing someone else photographing the Leshan Giant Buddha.

Check back on Radii tomorrow for a profile of Burrowes and his most recent interactive media project in Shanghai. And check a previous photo of his — runner-up in our inaugural photo contest this past summer — here:

NEWSLETTER

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