The solution from Google that keeps you close to art during quarantine
The coronavirus pandemic has come to a head for many people’s travel plans. But Google comes with the app that wants you to feel no distance from the artwork you had access to only if you could travel.
Beyond what is happening, however, this crisis has also overturned travel plans. There are places you probably wanted to visit in the next period, but you won’t have much. Google comes with a solution, however, dedicated especially to art lovers.
The Google Arts & Culture app is available on both iOS and Android. It has, among other features, features that allow the user to discover and explore works of art in different ways.
Here’s how it can be used and what you can “visit” with the application. The Google Arts & Culture app The Google Arts & Culture app is available on both iOS and Android.
It has, among other features, features that allow the user to discover and explore works of art in different ways. Here’s how it can be used and what you can “visit” with the application.
Art Projector – What would your home look like with famous artwork on the walls? For example, Vincent van Gogh’s “Starry Night” or Edward Hopper’s “Nighthawks.”
You can try this feature from the Arts & Culture app. Once you choose the place in the room and the painting to exhibit with the help of augmented reality, you can take a picture with the redecorated room. Accessed from the “camera” button on the main page of the application.
The Art of Color (Pocket Gallery) – A virtual gallery with works of art that open in the middle of the house and where you can walk and explore. Accessed from the “camera” button on the main page of the Arts & Culture application, then select the “Pocket Gallery” option and from there “The Art of Color”.
Art zoom – Numerous works of art that can be explored in details that cannot be observed with the naked eye and explained by specialists. Works such as Rembrand’s “Night Round” or Johannes Vermeer’s “Girl with the Pearl Earring” are described in detail, explained for all to understand.
Some works of art are “told” in video format. For example, you can discover Claude Monet with the help of vocalist from British Pulp band Jarvis Cocker.