Google Maps have gotten us into some pretty amazing places. Now, the Street View team has granted exclusive access to the Guggenheim. Not only does the technology let users tour the iconic Frank Lloyd Wright-designed spiraling rotunda, but it allows one to browse through the artworks on display over on last summer.
For visitors unable to travel to New York, Google Street View will provide a 360-degree experience of the building’s arresting rotunda galleries, allowing one to saunter up or down the distinctive, spiraling ramps or gaze up at the eye-catching oculus and across the ramps to examine works in Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim (2015). Users can click on works—like Maurizio Cattelan’s Daddy, Daddy (2008), a sculpture of Walt Disney’s Pinocchio floating facedown in the fountain on the rotunda floor, and Juliana Huxtable’s Untitled in the Rage (Nibiru Cataclysm) (2015), a self-portrait in which the artist interrogates gender norms and portrayals of femininity—to learn more about the objects and artists.
Contemporary art collected through the Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative and presented in the exhibition No Country: Contemporary Art for South and Southeast Asia (2013) is also available through the Google Art Project. Visitors to the site can examine in intimate detail high-resolution photographs of massive works such as Kamin Lertchaiprasert’s 366-part sculpture Sitting (Money) (2004–06), Sopheap Pich’s Morning Glory (2011), and Navin Rawanchaikul’s mural-size Places of Rebirth (2009). As the monumental size of Sitting (Money) prevented it from being shown in No Country at the museum, this collaboration between the Guggenheim and Google extends beyond the physical bounds of the building itself, providing a platform for not only art enthusiasts unable to travel to New York but local, repeat visitors as well.
Online visitors from around the world can now explore the interior of the iconic Frank Lloyd Wright–designed Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum through Google Street View technology. Additionally, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, in collaboration with the Google Cultural Institute, has made available over 120 artworks from its collection for online viewing
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Published on:
January 26, 2016
Cite: "Guggenheim and Google give an exclusive tour to the Inside Wright Building " METALOCUS.
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<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/guggenheim-and-google-give-exclusive-tour-inside-wright-building>
ISSN 1139-6415
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