Beyond Geographical and Cultural Barriers: The Concept of a Virtual Gallery for Arts, Design & Architecture Schools in Saudi Arabia ()
1. Introduction
Exhibition, demonstration, showcasing and public displays are important requirements for Art and Design students and professionals (Burton, 2006) . Nevertheless appropriate spaces to fulfill this requisite are limited and this lack has led to a need for alternatives of physical presentation for arts and design projects.
Intense advancement in Information and Communication Technology (ICT), pervasive computing and the digital media has entirely changed the exhibition tendencies of artifacts by introducing a virtual museum or virtual gallery. This paper proposes to establish a virtual gallery for the students of Saudi Arabian Universities by thoughtfully analyzing advantages and disadvantages associated with this medium.
2. Virtual Gallery: Definition
In absence of a proper definition for a virtual gallery the phenomenon could be traced back to virtual museums. It was in the 1960s when a French cultural theorist Andre Malraux first advocated the idea of a museum without walls. In his work “Le musee imaginaire” (literally translated as the imaginary museum). Malraux described the shift in how art was studied, understood and taught. Sadly he died in 1976 so he did not get to see the emergence of the Internet which has allowed a colossal “musee imaginaire” to surface, beyond Malraux’s original ideas. Malraux regarded the art museum as art’s ideal location and this can be seen today with the digital era and the field of new possibilities for the displaying of art (Ahearne, 2004) . Tsichritzis & Gibbs (1991) introduced the concept of virtual museums as a means to overcome the limitations of real museums and to increase user satisfaction and experience. Technological advances have provided society with the development of unique interactive abilities.
A virtual museum could be seen as a systematic and organised collection of digital objects over multimedia offering flexibility to visitors for communication and interaction as per their needs and interests. Objects are available through pervasive computing and have no real space of place (Bonis et al., 2009; Schweibenz, 1991) . It could be a digital aggregation of artifacts over cyberspace or available in digital format via PC, PDA or CD- ROM as an extension to physical displays which are available in an entirely virtual format (Styliani et al., 2009) . Virtual galleries are viewed as an effective alternative to a real visit; they hold greater importance for the visitors whose access to the real gallery sites is outlawed (Vosinakism & Xenakis, 2011) . In a virtual museum, a visitor can accomplish examine, explore, learn and interact with a digital collection of artifacts within a single or multiuser environment (Sylaiou et al., 2009) without any restrictions related to time and space. Furthermore, it can enrich visitors’ societal, scholastic and entertainment understanding (Dede & Ketelhut, 2003) .
Hence, the reflection that emerged from aforesaid definitions reveals that a virtual gallery showcases artifacts in a multimedia format available online through various computing instruments by overcoming many restrictive barriers. This offers flexible prospects to the visitors with regards to their level of knowledge related to artifacts.
3. Application Areas
Most commonly virtual galleries are used to display archaeological artifacts, which are known as virtual museums for instance, “The Herbert Virtual Museum” (Petridis et al., 2013) . Virtual museums are also believed to be supportive for the teaching and learning of disciplines related to history and culture (Panina, 2013; Ulusoy, 2010) . There are examples where virtual museums are utilised in a language (English) curricula for enhancing multimodal meaning making in a collaborative manner; designed and implemented by students (Caroline et al., 2011) .
Maryse & Marion (2007) studied 125 Canadian teachers and found that they were increasingly using the Internet and virtual museums in their primary and secondary teaching. They used museum websites and galleries as a supplementary teaching resource for History and social studies. The Nah Tah Wahsh School (2000) in Michigan developed a visual museum project where the students made choices about what they wanted to study. This proved to be an ideal way to ensure a student-centered constructivist-learning environment in schools. Constructivism proposes that knowledge is constructed through the physical interaction with the real world and therefore this has promising potential for education. Numerous applications can be showcased through a virtual gallery or museum over cyberspace, especially in the educational disciplines that are highly dependent to visualization or re-construction of historic artifacts.
The importance of virtual galleries has been researched in Art and Design disciplines especially for the sharing of creations, wider collaboration and enhancing teaching/learning processes (Lu, 2008; Burton, 2010; Carmo & Claudio, 2013) . Art, Design and Architecture courses are traditionally taught with PowerPoint presentations of images and textbooks. A virtual gallery will enhance traditional pedagogical methods by ensuring viewing is active and no longer passive. According to Omale et al., the development of 3-D virtual elements is an exciting trend with the potential to enable global cultural diffusion (Omale et al., 2009) . Ulusoy’s study aimed to determine whether the attitudes of open education students would be changed by the implementation of a virtual museum application. After viewing various resources and virtual displays the 20 students within the experimental group had a favourable opinion of the virtual museum application. The results revealed that using virtual museums in teaching History enhanced students’ motivation and conceptual understanding (Ulusoy, 2010) . Students appreciated the rich visual images they viewed: an exhibit can be manipulated by rotating to gain a clear perspective. This manipulation is not possible using static images in textbooks. In conclusion, the virtual museum application enabled the students to immerse themselves within the topics they were studying; participate more actively in their lessons and subsequently this made the lessons more productive.
4. Advantage of Virtual Gallery Applications
Enormous developments in Information and Communication Technology enabled Art and Design schools to increase their hi-tech visualisation. There are numerous inherited advantages of virtual gallery applications. It has long been realized that virtual galleries can increase the degree of interactions in manifold (Sánchez et al., 1997) . While feedbacks from visitors and peers are among other important benefits (Lu, 2008) continuous advertisements of self-identity and self-expression in the form of photographs, avatars, voice messages or texts are possible through virtual galleries even anonymously (Second Life, 2015; Zoneta, 2010) . These galleries even have the ability to overcome spatio-temporal constraints existing in physical showcasing (Vosinakism & Xenakis, 2011; Burton, 2010) . In virtual museums there are no limitations regarding display cases and extending/altering museums: instant change to a collection is possible. This alleviates issues with storage, presentation and protection of artifacts.
Opening discussion and critiques are well embedded in virtual galleries through higher interactions (Burton, 2010) . These platforms have a greater role to play in utilising artistic skill and developing the potential of the young generation. Social media such as Facebook, Twitter, Flicker, YouTube and many more can also enhance the learning environment by combining technological knowledge with designing skills as well as improvements in the quality of instructions (Solina, 2014; Burton, 2010; Lu, 2008) . It has full commercial abilities as some websites offer the virtual marketplace over cyberspace to sell the designs (Artsonia, 2014) . Besides 2D representation of artifacts, virtual galleries provide simulated 3D artifacts to give the feeling of a complete virtual reality (Solina, 2014; Carmo, 2013; Ullrich & Zara, 2002) . Replicating demolished historic buildings and constructions along the basis of available pictures and textual descriptions; simulations of ancient environments and understanding of chronological architectural evolution is possible in a virtual environment (Carmo, 2013).
Research has advocated technology use in art curricula especially to overcome cultural limitations; concluding the fact that web-based connectivity enriched with video elements can surely facilitate female students in learning, sharing ideas and finding inspiration (Alawad, 2013) . This is particularly pertinent in the higher learning institutions of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; where male and female students are separated.
An exhaustive list of the advantages of Virtual Gallery Applications; is presented in Table 1.
5. Disadvantages of Using a Virtual Gallery
Besides all its discussed virtues, virtual galleries have not always received positive feedback. The fundamental argument against virtual galleries is its level of accuracy related to possibly misleading artifacts (Ryan, 1996) . Critics condemn virtual museums through considering it a place where beauty is just rhetoric. Moreover, critics state that the Internet or cyberspace should be seen as a way into a museum never as an alternative to the real one (Jones, 2009) .
In virtual learning environments there is a threat of deserialization of learners (Winslow, 1996) , adverse impacts on task centered learning (Grove et al., 1996) , absence of efficient evaluation tools (Littman, 1996) , risks to long term vision because of extensive and continuous use of Head Mount Display-HMD, quality and reliability of the provisioning virtual environment and lack of reliable research findings (Sánchez et al., 1997) .
Additionally, there are myriad technical obstacles that need to be addressed and overcome. Firstly, how can we make sure a visual gallery is compatible with a wide variety of different access devices? Under-privileged countries may lack the infrastructure that is required for this medium. For example, students may not possess smart phones and may have to rely on a computer lab. Additional programming may be necessary to ensure
Table 1. An exhaustive list of the advantages of virtual gallery applications.
platform independence. Can the content of the virtual gallery be accessed and interacted with different hardware platforms, operating systems, and versions of software?
Furthermore, some sculptures may be 3-D rotatable and interactive while others may be viewable only as static 2-D images. A proper virtual gallery would require consistent actions and metadata for each of its objects. Examples of such metadata include the ability to enlarge images, play video to a high quality and links to related supplementary material.
Additionally, there are copyright laws, which can prevent users accessing certain artworks and artifacts. Wadsworth Atheneum website has a large online collection exceeding 50,000 works of art and open use rules. Nevertheless, numerous sites censor access to certain works or request payment for viewing. The visual message of the artwork may be censored. This could lead to a situation where some types of art are absent or underrepresented in the Internet. Finally, censorship is an issue as these galleries could be used in countries with strict laws, which restrict the content of what are viewed. This could affect, confuse and disrupt educational goals.
6. Virtual Gallery Network for Art and Design Students in Saudi Arabian Universities
After analyzing the pros and cons of virtual galleries, we found that its advantages are much more valuable than the disadvantages and also the disadvantages could be minimized through adoption of appropriate technological solutions. At the primary education level the concept of a virtual gallery is not new as we found that around 700 artistic creations are present from Saudi Arabia at the largest virtual art museum in the world: (Artsoina 2014). Unfortunately no such experiments have been conducted at higher educational institutions. Hence we propose a framework for a virtual gallery for arts and design students of Saudi Arabian universities (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Framework for virtual gallery.
For the proposed virtual gallery we have to ensure its acceptance in term of practicality, accessibility, social impacts, enabling environment and identification of audience. Secondly, the proposed framework attempts to develop teaching and learning applications aimed at enhanced academic and research communication, improved interdisciplinary collaborations and enriched knowledge and resource sharing. Finally, the target is to accelerate virtual interactions, whether social or professional or daily events; these interactions could be conducted through social media interfaces.
7. Conclusion
We establish that the confluence of Arts and Technology in a virtual gallery can offer greater flexibility of interactions, learning, sharing, discussing, critiquing and marketing that can not only solve the challenges from geographical barriers, but also it can be advantageous for female students that cannot interact with male students due to cultural barriers in the real environment. A proposed virtual gallery for the students of Art and Design at Saudi Universities can open new avenues of interaction in a virtual environment for enhanced learning and collaborations, which is especially pertinent in the case of female students.