Spain's Prado teams up with Google Earth
MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Spain's Prado Museum has teamed up with Google Earth for a project that allows people to zoom in on the gallery's main works -- even on details not immediately discernible to the human eye.
The initiative, announced Tuesday, is the first of its kind involving an art museum. It involves 14 of the Prado's choicest paintings, including Diego Velazquez's "Las Meninas," Francisco de Goya's "Third of May" and Peter Paul Rubens' "The Three Graces."
"There is no better way to pay tribute to the great masters of the history of art than to universalize knowledge of their works using optimum conditions," Prado director Miguel Zugaza said.
Google Spain director Javier Rodriguez Zapatero said the images now available on the Internet were 1,400 times clearer than what would be rendered with a 10-megapixel camera.
"With Google Earth technology it is possible to enjoy these magnificent works in a way never previously possible, obtaining details impossible to appreciate through firsthand observation," he said at a news conference at the museum.
Copyright 2009, The Associated Press
Google Earth is a free service provided by the Internet search engine company Google that uses satellite technology to reproduce maps and finely detailed images of places throughout the world, from people's houses in American cities to beaches or forests in Africa.
The Prado idea was the brainchild of Google worker Clara Rivera.
"There is nothing comparable to standing before any of these paintings, but this offers a complementary view," Rivera said.
"Normally you have to stand a good distance away from these works, but this offers you the chance to see details that you could only see from a big ladder placed right beside them."
With the click of a mouse, she showed examples including that of a minuscule wasp on the petal of a flower just above the head of the women in the Rubens work. Another gave a microscopic glance of a teardrop in Roger van der Weyden's "Descent from the Cross."
The project involved 8,200 photographs taken between May and July last year which were then combined with Google Earth's zoom-in technology.
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