Hello everyone, I finally find
some time to unravel the quiz now place two weeks ago. The photos I had brought the painting showed a particular "The Three Graces" of Pieter Paul Rubens , Flemish painter who lived between 1500 and 1600.
some time to unravel the quiz now place two weeks ago. The photos I had brought the painting showed a particular "The Three Graces" of Pieter Paul Rubens , Flemish painter who lived between 1500 and 1600.
The detail that I showed you is nothing but a garland of flowers placed over the heads of the three dancing Graces. Although it is a very small part of the picture, the picture was perfectly readable and indeed, one could perfectly well appreciate the little bee on a flower drawn.
To capture this particular matter does not go to the Prado scale and fitted with a camera, waiting the right light to take the picture! Just go to Google maps or Google Earth and look for the museum.
To capture this particular matter does not go to the Prado scale and fitted with a camera, waiting the right light to take the picture! Just go to Google maps or Google Earth and look for the museum.
The popular search engine is in fact waging a campaign scanning the most important works of the Prado to offer them the widest possible dissemination, digital images were acquired at very high resolution have a definition of about 14,000 million pixels!
Digital copies made on-line permit, therefore, not only an enjoyable unprecedented image (no blurs or abrupt transitions between one color to another), but also a clarity of detail almost better than to eye naked so you can appreciate the little bee on the flowers in "The Three Graces' by Rubens, or tears on the faces of the" Crucifixion "by Juan de Flanders.
also add the video released by Google that shows all stages of the project.
As shown in the video, Google Earth, enabling the label "3D Buildings", you can also "visit" the building of the Prado: it is a first step to the "online travel"?
also add the video released by Google that shows all stages of the project.
As shown in the video, Google Earth, enabling the label "3D Buildings", you can also "visit" the building of the Prado: it is a first step to the "online travel"?
course, see the works live them live fully in the place where they are stored, is not comparable to the simple vision of a copy digital, but that will anyone, even those who can not go to the Prado in person (for economic reasons, distance or for any other reason) may have access to cultural heritage that these works represent. And this is beautiful.
Andrea
0 comments:
Post a Comment