Art & design

Explore an incredible 108 Gaps

One of the joys of visiting an artistic museum is closely displaying the paintings – to see its tires and tires and the way the surface interacts with light. But even if you have the opportunity to bypass security wires and reach Boost from the original plate, you can still see the work just like the new 108 GB of Scan from “Johannes Vermeer’s girl” with the pearl flow “(1665).

Maurichois She documented her most famous acquisition with unprecedented details with the help of the lenses company HiroxWhich produced a video microscope capable of capturing the smallest spot of paint amazingly. The outfit also participated in a previous cloning of the same painting, creating an image consisting of 10 billion pixels.

Very close details of the oil painting with small boosters of paint and refined texture

This higher technical cooperation brings a masterpiece from the seventeenth century to life with Interactive site Inviting visitors to examine all the small details. The new image is more than ten times like its predecessor – 108 Gigapixels translated into 108 one billion Pixel. The standard computer screen ranges from about four to six million pixels in its entirety. like Cotc Notes, very high resolution, also, at 1.3 microns per pixel. (Millimeter is 1000 microns.)

Hirox, along with a company called Tuur, produced a beautiful video and virtual tour. A three -dimensional tool to explore the terrain of the surface is highlighted to the light of light, such as reflections in the eyes of the incubator, the folds of its head scarf, and the minimum white paint on the heavy pearl.

This virtual exploration provides both art historians and enthusiasts an opportunity to try “a girl with Bell’s throat” unprecedented, regardless of where you are. But if you are in The Hague, it will also be shown in the permanent set of MARITSHUIS.

Very close details of a woman's oily panel
Very close details of the oil painting inside a black frame with software movement buttons
Very close details of the oily painting with a written blue tissue

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