Box of delight
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The British Museum Puts 1.9 Million Works of Art Online

The British Museum Puts 1.9 Million Works of Art Online | Box of delight | Scoop.it


Maybe it’s always too soon to make predictions, but historians of the future will likely view the time of COVID-19 as one of unprecedented cultural, social, and economic change on a vast scale. One of those changes, the opening of historic museum collections—photographed and uploaded in high resolution images, and viewable in the kind of fine detail one could never get close enough to see in person—has put an advancing trend into hyperdrive. The British Museum, for example, has just announced a “major revamp” of its digital collection, Vice reports, “making nearly 1.9 million images free to use for anyone under a Creative Commons 4.0 license.”

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Scooped by Elizabeth E Charles
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Take a Virtual Tour of 30 World-Class Museums & Safely Visit 2 Million Works of Fine Art

Take a Virtual Tour of 30 World-Class Museums & Safely Visit 2 Million Works of Fine Art | Box of delight | Scoop.it

Since the first stirrings of the internet, artists and curators have puzzled over what the fluidity of online space would do to the experience of viewing works of art. At a conference on the subject in 2001, Susan Hazan of the Israel Museum wondered whether there is “space for enchantment in a technological world?” She referred to Walter Benjamin’s ruminations on the “potentially liberating phenomenon” of technologically reproduced art, yet also noted that “what was forfeited in this process were the ‘aura’ and the authority of the object containing within it the values of cultural heritage and tradition.” .”

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