Google Art Project Is Street View for Galleries and Museums

By Mark Brown, Wired UK Google has taken its 360-degree Street View cameras into some of the most famous and acclaimed galleries, to open the world’s art collection to the internet. From the Tate Britain in London to the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Google Art Project lets you browse 385 rooms in 17 galleries, and […]
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By Mark Brown, Wired UK

Google has taken its 360-degree Street View cameras into some of the most famous and acclaimed galleries, to open the world's art collection to the internet.

From the Tate Britain in London to the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, Google Art Project lets you browse 385 rooms in 17 galleries, and see more than 1,000 works by 486 artists.

Each of the galleries has selected one piece of artwork to be photographed in staggeringly high resolution, with each of the 17 images containing around 7 billion pixels. Zoom in close enough, and you can see individual brushstrokes, hairline cracks in the canvas and microscopic details that are almost invisible to the naked eye -- like tiny Latin messages scrawled on Hans Holbein the Younger's The Merchant Georg Gisze, pictured above, in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin.

"It's our first step toward making great art more accessible," said project lead Amit Sood on the Google blog, "and we hope to add more museums and works of art in time."

The effect was captured in pretty much the same way that Google has used to map out most of the world, including Antarctica, Whistler Mountain, Champs-Élysées and Stonehenge. But instead of cars (or snowmobiles), the team used the Street View tricycle for open spaces, and a more-compact vertical trolley for the halls.

The pushcart -- "lovingly dubbed Trolley," writes Google's Jonathan Siegel -- features a panoramic camera, lasers to calculate distances to the walls, motion sensors to track the rig's position, a hard drive to store the huge images and a laptop to operate it.

Interestingly enough, while Google has set up a bespoke website for the art gallery tours, you can also leap into buildings from Google Maps itself. Some museums, such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, let you drop Pegman (the Google Street View icon) directly onto a map of the gallery, while others let you enter from the street with a new, double-arrow icon.

Could this signal more inside-Street View projects in the future?

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