There are a few different ways to add video content into a Ceros Experience. In this case we are using the "Embed Object" tool to pull a Youtube video into Ceros.
You can also drag and drop video files directly from your desktop into the Ceros Studio.
We created a somewhat more advanced image carousel that accomplishes a few things - showcasse a new image, switches out the number icon, and hides all of the other image/number layers.
But don't recreate the wheel - simply select the different images and use "Replace Image" to add in images of your own.
Use the baked-in social sharing interactions to allow users to share your piece on their favorite social network. As a bonus, we will automatically track these social shares on our analytics platform.
Use a "Pulse" animation set to repeat with a long duration to create a bit of movement without distracting your user.
Couple your beautiful imagery with bold text treatments for a truly unique look.
Use hotspots and interactions to create global navigation within a piece. In this case, we created one menu smart group that can be copy and pasted across pages. This way, anywhere we make a change will be reflected across every menu item.
1800px x 9618px
Templates - Editorial Content
This long scrolling editorial piece is a beautiful way to showcase a ton of information in an easy to digest format. This piece can exist as a standalone piece of content or be embedded on your own web property.
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Local
Landmarks
As the weather warms and the focus of the season is tranquility, now is the time to discover your community’s next great cultural experience. Located in the heart of Stanford University’s campus arts district sits Cantor Arts Center, an impressive art collection housed in over 13,000 square feet of beautifully designed and historically significant exhibition space. Open to the public and free to visit, the Cantor is a touchstone featuring some of the most culturally important paintings, sculptures, photographs, and multimedia installations on the West Coast.
Exploring the Cantor on Stanford’s beautiful grounds makes for an excellent day trip, with more than enough to dazzle the eyes and invigorate the spirit. Plan ahead and reserve a free all-day ticket to survey the museum galleries and the surrounding gardens. Wander amongst Stanford’s sprawling arboretum and take in the campus grounds, originally designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., the landscape architect behind New York City’s Central Park. Enjoy lunch at the museum’s newly opened café, offering seasonal Italian-style eats. Take advantage of one of the Cantor’s public tours, including docent-led walks through the outdoor sculptures, highlights of the Cantor’s permanent collection, and informed discourse on the museum’s current exhibitions. Don’t forget the neighboring Anderson Collection, a perfect complement to the Cantor, exhibiting works of modern and contemporary American art.
Once the largest privately owned art museum building in the world, the art space remains on par with some of the most prominent and influential collections of 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century art, and it boasts one of the largest collections of Auguste Rodin sculptures outside of Paris. The museum also includes a singular collection of Asian art with a new and particular focus on Asian American and Asian diaspora art.
Current &
upcoming exhibitons
With its finger on the pulse of America’s art world zeitgeist, the Cantor is currently presenting several exciting exhibitions. Through July 3rd, explore artist Gordon Parks’ A Loaded Camera, a comprehensive view of American poverty, racism, and discrimination through the lens of one of the country’s great barrier-breaking African American photographers and filmmakers.
On view through November 27th is LJ Roberts: Carry You With Me, consisting of 26 hand-stitched embroidered portraits of the artist’s vast circle of friends and lovers within the queer and trans New York art scene. Ian Cheng: Emissary Sunsets The Self is an ongoing installation. Created with a video game engine, the work generates open-ended animations without fixed outcomes – a format that artist Ian Cheng calls “live simulation.”
Additionally, this year the Cantor is poised to present upcoming installations and exhibitions related to the Asian American Art Initiative, an academic and curatorial collaboration with Stanford’s Department of Art and Art History to study Asian American and Asian diaspora artists. Starting July 6th, don’t miss The Faces of Ruth Asawa, an installation of Asawa’s little-known and never exhibited clay mask sculptures. Beginning on August 31st, At Home/On Stage: Asian American Representation in Photography and Film depicts riveting images reflecting themes of Asian American identity and representation in social and political circles.
The third exhibition is the largest, titled East of the Pacific: Making Histories of Asian American Art. Debuting on September 28th, this historical survey exhibits long-overlooked art spanning from 1880 to 2021, begging the question of how to reorient our understanding of Asia and the United States by viewing works created by artists living in both parts of the globe.
Immersing yourself in great art and beauty has the potential to transform your worldview and deepen your perspective. Take advantage of easy access to this institutional wonder and plan your visit to the Cantor today, an experience that will leave you inspired and refreshed.
Spend a day exploring Stanford’s grounds and its free on-campus art museum
Opening its doors in 1894, the Museum of Art at Stanford University (now the Cantor Arts Center) was established with European and American master paintings and antiquities collected over decades during the extensive travels of university founders and philanthropists Leland and Jane Stanford. Erected as a memorial to Leland and Jane’s only child, Leland Stanford, Jr., the Cantor stands as a monument in service of the Leland family’s devotion to the education and enlightenment of all people, especially children.
Spend a day exploring Stanford’s beautiful grounds and its free on-campus art museum
Follow @Cantorarts on instagram
Plan your visit
Sponsored by
A Loaded Camera: Gordon Parks
LJ Roberts: Carry You With Me
Ian Cheng: Emissary Sunsets The Self
The Faces of
Ruth Asawa
East of the Pacific: Making Histories of Asian American Art
Get tickets
By StoryStudio on June 27, 2022 11:19 AM