EchoMuse is an inclusive digital art platform built on a simple premise: art accessibility is not only about exposure, but about participation, reflection, and shared meaning-making. We begin with art popularization, but we do not stop at distribution. Our goal is to redesign how people encounter art—so that access is not limited by geography, expertise, or physical ability. EchoMuse integrates accessibility as a structural principle rather than a supplementary feature. Audio description, multimodal interaction, and cognitively considerate design are embedded across the platform to ensure that engagement with art is not visually exclusive. The platform is organized into five interconnected spaces, each representing a different mode of encounter.
Art diary and self-dialogue
This space supports slow, personal reflection. Users can record art diaries—through audio or text—to document emotional responses, questions, memories, and interpretations.
Instead of encouraging rapid consumption or performative sharing, this section emphasizes:
Art becomes a medium for self-examination rather than evaluation.
Bringing nearby art into a global shared space
Art does not only exist in museums. It exists in neighborhoods, public spaces, temporary exhibitions, and everyday environments. Echo with Community allows users to:
This section operates as a decentralized cultural map, reducing geographic inequality in art visibility and encouraging collective documentation.
Focused engagement with canonical works
Contemporary digital platforms often fragment art history into isolated images and short descriptions. Echo with Classics addresses this problem by restructuring how classical artworks are presented.
Rather than overwhelming users with large collections, the design prioritizes:
The objective is not breadth, but depth—encouraging sustained attention and thoughtful engagement with art historical context.
AI-assisted dialogue
ArtGPT is an integrated AI agent designed for interpretive conversation rather than authoritative explanation. Users can:
The AI functions as a conversational guide, supporting inquiry while preserving interpretive openness.
A 3D curatorial and exhibition design space
EchoMuse also supports active creation. In a blank three-dimensional virtual environment, users can:
This space transforms users from viewers into curators and spatial thinkers, reinforcing the idea that art engagement includes construction, not only reception.
EchoMuse integrates accessibility at every level of design:
Accessibility is treated as a foundational design requirement, not as a specialized add-on.