This Article is From Feb 02, 2011

World's galleries go online with Google Street View

World's galleries go online with Google Street View
London: Art lovers will be able to stroll through some of the world's most famous galleries at the click of a mouse after Google launched a website today using Street View technology to put the venues online.In a collaboration with 17 leading galleries in nine countries, the US Internet giant has taken equipment from the cars it used to map cities and recorded the galleries so they can be enjoyed by anyone with web access.The Museum of Modern Art in New York, London's National Gallery and the Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid are three of the galleries that art aficionados will be able to explore by logging on to www.googleartproject.com. Art by Vincent van Gogh, James McNeill Whistler and Sandro Botticelli are among more than 1,000 works that have been photographed and "hung" in the virtual galleries.Visitors will be able to look around more than 350 gallery rooms containing work by more than 450 artists. The project was "a major step forward in how a lot of people are going to interact with these beautiful treasures," said Nelson Mattos, vice president of engineering at Google. "We hope it will inspire ever more people, wherever they live, to access and explore art," he told journalists at a launch event in the Tate Britain gallery in London, one of the venues involved in the project.For the Art Project, Google took cameras from their Street View cars and took them inside for the first time, filming with specially made trolleys in the galleries to create the 360-degree virtual tours. Each of the 17 galleries also photographed one super high-resolution image -- each image contains around seven billion pixels and took between four and eight hours to capture. This means visitors can see details in pictures that were previously impossible to view with the naked eye, such as the tiny Latin Couplet in "The Merchant Georg Gisze" by Hans Holbein the Younger, in the Gemaeldegalerie, Berlin. Other works to get the super high-resolution treatmentinclude Van Gogh's "The Starry Night", which is in the Museum of Modern Art, and "In the Conservatory" by Edouard Manet from the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin.

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