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Google Art Project – A Trip To Art Museums

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, The Vatican Museums in Rome, The Tate Museum in London, or The Smithsonian in Washington, DC, you name it and it will be there. You can navigate through the museums and relish the moment of looking at a detailed art piece with description. The Google Art Project is the second best way to visit the art museums and loose yourself amidst all the wondrous work of art by famous art scholars.
To navigate through art museums in Google Art project all you need to do is to select the museum, select the specific art work and you are all set to lay sight on the wonders. Each piece of art will have a side bar containing information about the art form and the artist.
The
website
works
on
the
path
of
the
Google
Street
View,
to
allow
the
user
explore
the
museums.
One
can
navigate
through
the
streets
,
enter
the
museum
and
go
through
different
sections
of
the
museum.
The
map
will
guide
the
user
as
to
which
part
of
the
museum
has
what
to
offer.
Amit
Sood,
the
head
of
the
Google
Art
Project,
started
working
on
it
in
London.
What
started
as
out
of
personal
interest
in
art,
went
on
to
take
a
larger
shape
and
slowly
several
museums
became
it's
member.
There
is
an
option,
which
allows
the
user
to
enlarge
the
picture
to
view
better.
The
decision
of
which
picture
should
be
placed
on
the
site,
the
size
and
the
resolution
was
left
on
the
museum
completely.
One drawback of the website is that it does not have any of the West Coast museums which have disappointed many of the viewers. The Boston Globe"s Sebastian Smee says, “We"re deluding ourselves if we think Van Gogh"s brilliance can be subdivided into pixels . . . to start with, human vision is binocular; digital photography is not." To this Amit Sood replies, "We all feel strongly that this was never done with the intention to replicate (that) experience. This was done with an intention to bring new audiences into museums".



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