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Jason Farago: What a Tiny Masterpiece Reveals About Power and Beauty (NYT)
Jason Farago: What a Tiny Masterpiece Reveals About Power and Beauty (NYT)
An article about art and power focused on a piece from the Mughal empire, with an intriguing layout that scrolls sentences by on the left while zooming in on different parts of the art on the right. Crosscurrents of religion and culture shaped this stunningly detailed portrait of the 17th-century Mughal emperor who built the Taj Mahal. --- Power, for the Mughals, also came from absorbing the cultural forms under their authority, then reconstituting them in their own image.
·nytimes.com·
Jason Farago: What a Tiny Masterpiece Reveals About Power and Beauty (NYT)
Historic Tale Construction Kit: Make your own Bayeux Tapestry
Historic Tale Construction Kit: Make your own Bayeux Tapestry
Historic Tale Construction Kit - Bayeux Two German students originally wrote the Historic Tale Construction Kit, with Flash. Sadly, their work isn't available anymore, only remembered. This new application is a tribute, but also an attempt to revive the old medieval meme, with code and availability that won't get lost.
·htck.github.io·
Historic Tale Construction Kit: Make your own Bayeux Tapestry
The Met Collection
The Met Collection
When The Met was founded in 1870, it owned not a single work of art. Through the combined efforts of generations of curators, researchers, and collectors, our collection has grown to represent more than 5,000 years of art from across the globe—from the first cities of the ancient world to the works of our time.
·metmuseum.org·
The Met Collection
Smithsonian Open Access
Smithsonian Open Access
Welcome to Smithsonian Open Access, where you can download, share, and reuse millions of the Smithsonian’s images—right now, without asking. With new platforms and tools, you have easier access to nearly 3 million 2D and 3D digital items from our collections—with many more to come. This includes images and data from across the Smithsonian’s 19 museums, nine research centers, libraries, archives, and the National Zoo.
·si.edu·
Smithsonian Open Access
Darius Kazemi: How to be a library archive tourist
Darius Kazemi: How to be a library archive tourist
When I'm traveling and am at a loss for how to spend my time, I look up as many libraries I can in the area I'll be traveling to, and I check to see if they have special collections. Then I make an appointment with the library to visit those special collections, and usually it means I get to spend a day in a quiet, climate-controlled room with cool old documents. It's like a museum but with no people, and where you have to do all the work, which is honestly my idea of a perfect vacation.
·tinysubversions.com·
Darius Kazemi: How to be a library archive tourist
The Art Institute of Chicago: The Collection
The Art Institute of Chicago: The Collection
53K+ high-resolution pieces of art. Explore thousands of artworks in the museum’s wide-ranging collection—from our world-renowned icons to lesser-known gems from every corner of the globe—as well as our books, writings, reference materials, and other resources.
·artic.edu·
The Art Institute of Chicago: The Collection
The ASC: John Bailey's Bailiwick: Spomenik—Jan Kempenaers and “The End of History”
The ASC: John Bailey's Bailiwick: Spomenik—Jan Kempenaers and “The End of History”
Beautiful, haunting, gigantic sculptures. “There are hundreds of them scattered throughout villages and rural landscapes in the former Yugoslavia. Once the site of pilgrimages by schoolchildren, military veterans, patriots, and mourners who had lost family in WWII, these Spomeniks (monuments) are today rarely visited. Often built out of concrete in a style dubbed Brutalism, these secular totems were meant to endure, impervious to the mere march of time—a testament and continuous witness to the new unity of the historically fractious Balkan states—the unity of all the Slavs, YUGOSLAVIA.”
·ascmag.com·
The ASC: John Bailey's Bailiwick: Spomenik—Jan Kempenaers and “The End of History”
MoMA.org: The Collection
MoMA.org: The Collection
This is fun to browse through. "From an initial gift of eight prints and one drawing, The Museum of Modern Art's collection has grown to include 150,000 paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, architectural models and drawings, and design objects. MoMA also owns some 22,000 films, videos, and media works, as well as film stills, scripts, posters and historical documents. The Museum's Library contains 300,000 books, artist books, and periodicals, and the Museum Archives holds approximately 2,500 linear feet of historical documentation and a photographic archive of tens of thousands of photographs, including installation views of exhibitions and images of the Museum's building and grounds."
·moma.org·
MoMA.org: The Collection
Neatorama: 13 Photographs That Changed the World
Neatorama: 13 Photographs That Changed the World
Any picture can speak 1,000 words, but only a select few say something poignant enough to galvanize an entire society. The following photographs screamed so loudly that the entire world stopped to take notice.1. The Photograph That Raised the Photojournalistic Stakes: "Omaha Beach, Normandy, France"Robert Capa, 1944"If your pictures aren't good enough," war photographer Robert Capa used to say, "you aren't close enough." Words to die by, yes, but the man knew of what he spoke. After all, his most memorab...
·neatorama.com·
Neatorama: 13 Photographs That Changed the World