google arts and culture

Latest

  • Pet Portraits feature in the Google Arts & Culture app.

    Google can now find your pet's doppelgänger in works of art

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    11.08.2021

    The Arts & Culture app uses machine learning to find matches in paintings, sculptures and more.

  • Photo from a tour of the cities of Delhi, Agra and Jaipur - often known as the Golden Triangle - in Northern India

    Google offers virtual tours of UNESCO World Heritage sites

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    04.19.2021

    Explore Mount Kilimanjaro, the Taj Mahal, Yosemite National Park and many other locations.

  • Google's 'Play a Kandinsky' machine learning experiment

    Google tries to replicate synesthesia with its latest experiment

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    02.10.2021

    'Play a Kandinsky' uses machine learning to bring sounds to one of the artist's paintings.

  • Google Art Zoom

    Grimes, FKA twigs and Twice's Chaeyoung give art talks for Google

    by 
    Aaron Souppouris
    Aaron Souppouris
    09.15.2020

    After two million people listened to musician Maggie Rogers narrate an ASMRy video about Van Gogh's Starry Night, Google has released a second season of Art Zoom. The project combines the Google Arts & Culture division’s photography with wispy narration from musicians, and the first set of videos last year also featured Feist on Bruegel, Jarvis Cocker on Monet and Girl in Red on Edvard Munch. The 1975 frontman Matty Healy gets into Mondrian’s abstract art, K-pop group Twice’s Chaeyoung narrates Yoo Youngkuk’s Mountain, while Grimes covers Bruegel’s The Fall of Rebel Angels.

  • Google

    Google's latest VR app lets you gaze at prehistoric paintings

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    02.27.2020

    Over the years, Google has digitized countless museums, galleries and landmarks for Arts & Culture, an encyclopaedic platform that anyone can access through a browser or mobile app. Today, the company is launching a new collection based on the Chauvet Cave in Ardèche, France, which contains some breathtaking prehistoric art. While the exact age of the paintings is unknown, radioactive dating has pinned the earliest to a period 36,000 years ago. The site was discovered in 1994 and, to prevent damage, closed off to the public that same year. Beyond a full-size replica, Google's new exhibit is the closest you'll ever get to standing inside the cave.

  • Google

    Google's 3D scans recreate historical sites threatened by climate change

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.29.2020

    Google is no stranger to reproducing historical sites online, but it's now pushing technical boundaries to recreate those sites at risk of vanishing due to the ravages of climate change. It's launching a "Heritage on the Edge" collection in Arts & Culture that will include over 50 exhibitions illustrating the effect of an evolving climate on historical landmarks, including five locations recreated in detailed 3D (with 25 models total) using a mix of scans, photogrammetry and drone footage. You can see vivid depictions of the statues at Easter Island's Rapa Nui, the Old and New Towns of Edinburgh, the trading port of Kilwa Kisiwani in Tanzania, Bangladesh's Mosque City of Bagerhat and Peru's ancient city of Chan Chan.

  • SIPA USA/PA Images

    Google recreates Apollo 11's command module with AR

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    07.10.2019

    The 50th anniversary of our first successful trip to the moon is fast approaching. And Google, which rarely shies away from marking a significant moment in history, has laid out some of the ways in which it'll celebrate the half-century since Apollo 11 reached the lunar surface.

  • NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Google takes you inside Anne Frank's childhood home with Street View

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    06.12.2019

    June 12th is the 90th birthday of Anne Frank, and to mark the occasion, Google is letting you step inside the childhood home of the diarist. A virtual exhibit in the Arts & Culture app and website takes you inside Merwedeplein 37-2 in Amsterdam. You can also explore the space through an indoor version of Street View. All the 1930s-styled rooms of the home, which is now a temporary home and work space for refugee writers that's closed to the public, are viewable.