Prairie Post (East Edition)

Swift Current Museum hosts unique interactiv­e exhibition

- By Matthew Liebenberg

mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

Technology and history are coming together in a unique way in a travelling exhibition at the Swift Current Museum.

The Ace Academy: Flight Experience exhibition was created by the Canada Aviation and Space Museum.

It offers an immersive experience to visitors and allows them to pilot a First World War biplane through the use of motion sensing technology.

“You stand on the target and the camera will pick you up,” Swift Current Museum Director and Curator Lloyd Begley explained. “It will give you a brief explanatio­n of how things work and basically you move your body. So you steer the aircraft with your arms.”

The interactiv­e experience is activated when someone stands on a rondel in front of a large screen. Player can manoeuvre a realistic rendering of the Canada Aviation and Space Museum’s Sopwith Ship Camel biplane when they move their arms up and down and tilt their bodies.

A player will participat­e in a dogfight against enemy fighter planes over the warfront during the First World War. They need to evade enemy aircraft and try to get into position to fire and shoot down their opponents.

The different body movements required to fly the biplane will give players a sense of how an aircraft reacts to different inputs.

“You really notice that when you step into the simulator itself, when you’re using your body movements to control the aircraft,” he said. “You kind of get the idea of how things react to the control surfaces themselves.”

The flight experience in this travelling exhibition is based

on Ace Academy, an educationa­l game produced by the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in partnershi­p with SEED Interactiv­e. The exhibition includes two computers that allow visitors an opportunit­y to explore the two Ace Academy games, Skies of Fury and Black Flight.

These games allow users to learn about flight and explore informatio­n about how aircraft fly. It also features other historic aircraft from the Canada Aviation and Space Museum’s collection of war planes from the First World War.

“So it’s a video game on how to fly an aircraft,” he said

“You learn about the control difference­s and you see the vortices coming off the wing, pressure difference­s that keep the aircraft in flight. It demonstrat­es theory of flight and how things came to be.”

This exhibition came to Swift Current from Ontario, where it was previously on show. It had been on display at locations across the country and the Swift Current Museum was eager to also bring it to Saskatchew­an.

“It’s not that often that we get travelling exhibition­s,” Begley said. “We were looking at ways that we could enhance visitation and encourage people within our community to experience something new.”

A few historic photos are added to the exhibition to create a connection with Swift Current’s own military history.

There is an image of soldiers from the 209th Battalion marching in front of the train station building in downtown Swift Current in 1914. Another photo shows soldiers from this same battalion on the parade ground at Camp Hughes in Manitoba during their training before departing for Europe during the First World War.

There is also a cut-out image from the Second World War taken at the Swift Current Airport, which was used as a flying training school for British and Commonweal­th pilots.

“In recent years we’ve been involved in archaeolog­y at the airport,” he noted. “We have talked at length in some of our exhibition­s with respect to those members of our community that have taken part in service to their country with respect to the Royal Canadian Air Force or in the case of the First World War the Royal Air Force. And so this opportunit­y came up with the Canada Aviation and Space Museum to host a small exhibition that would give members of our community a little bit of history regarding the theories of flight, the control of an aircraft, control surfaces, different theories to keep aircraft aloft.”

The exhibition Ace Academy: Flight Experience will be at the Swift Current Museum until Feb. 12. Admission is free. The museum is open on weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 1-5 p.m. Groups interested in visiting this exhibition outside regular hours can make a special arrangemen­t with the museum.

 ?? Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post ?? Swift Current Museum Director and Curator Lloyd Begley plays the Ace Academy education game Skies of Fury, which is part of the travelling exhibition.
Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post Swift Current Museum Director and Curator Lloyd Begley plays the Ace Academy education game Skies of Fury, which is part of the travelling exhibition.
 ?? ?? The travelling exhibition Ace Academy: Flight Experience combines technology and history to provide an interactiv­e experience for visitors.
The travelling exhibition Ace Academy: Flight Experience combines technology and history to provide an interactiv­e experience for visitors.
 ?? Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post ?? Swift Current Museum Director and Curator Lloyd Begley demonstrat­es the use of body movements to steer a First World War biplane in the interactiv­e travelling exhibition.
Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post Swift Current Museum Director and Curator Lloyd Begley demonstrat­es the use of body movements to steer a First World War biplane in the interactiv­e travelling exhibition.
 ?? ?? A screen in the exhibition shows a First World War biplane, which is controlled by players through body movements.
A screen in the exhibition shows a First World War biplane, which is controlled by players through body movements.

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