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TRAVEL

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Take a tour of the world’s greatest museums and galleries from the comfort of your couch

Wander through some of the world’s most iconic museums without having to leave the comfort of your sofa

Y ou don’t need a plane ticket to visit some of the best museums in the world. Thanks to virtual technology, you can visit them in your own home.

LOUVRE MUSEUM IN PARIS

The Louvre Museum in

France is the world’s largest art museum and a historic monument in Paris. Art lover or not, this is one museum that should be on your list of places to visit. For the time being, however, it’s closed to the public, but if you head to the museum’s website, you’ll be able to take a virtual tour of it. Not only will you be able to visit the museum’s many exhibition rooms and galleries, you will also be able to view the beautiful facade of the Louvre, too. Heard of the stunning Galerie d’Apollon (Apollo Gallery)? The ceiling is famous for its high vaulted ceilings with painted decoration­s and you can see it up-close in the virtual reality tour. Like wow!

louvre. fr

GUGGENHEIM IN NEW YORK

This virtual tour of the

New York icon focuses on the Guggenheim’s famous spiral staircase, where you can see works of art from the Impression­ist, PostImpres­sionist, Modern and contempora­ry eras. While you may finish your virtual tour of the staircase fairly fast, you can head to the main homepage and scroll though other artworks at the museum.

artsandcul­ture.google. com/partner/solomon-rguggenhei­m-museum

VAN GOGH MUSEUM IN AMSTERDAM

While you won’t be able to catch Vincent van Gogh’s

The Starry Night here (don’t worry, you will at the MoMA — the Museum of Modern Art, up next), you will be able to spot plenty of his other masterpiec­es. In fact, this museum houses his largest collection, including 200 paintings, 500 drawings, and over 750 personal letters. Paintings include Branches with Almond Blossom, Sunflowers, The Bedroom, Wheat Field with Crows (believed to be the last painting he ever did) and much more.

artsandcul­ture.google.com/ partner/van-gogh-museum

MUSEUM OF MODERN ART

The Museum of Modern

Art (MoMA) in New York houses one of the world’s finest collection­s of modern and contempora­ry art. It is dedicated to the conversati­on between the past and the present, the establishe­d and the experiment­al. Apart from Van Gogh’s The Starry Night, you will also be able to look at artworks by Andy Warhol, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí and many more modernist artists.

artsandcul­ture.google.com/ partner/moma-the-museum-ofmodern-art

THE SMITHSONIA­N

If you love the Big Bang Theory and wholeheart­edly agree with what Ross from TV sitcom Friends has to say, then you’ll love The Smithsonia­n. The museum seeks to understand the natural world and our place in it. This museum holds about 155.5 million objects, which include artworks, cultural artefacts and scientific specimens spread across three floors, but, not all of these are visible on the 360-degree tour. Items you can get a closer look at range from a Neandertha­l reconstruc­tion, to earth rocks that are about 3.96 billion years old to a 195-carat sapphire, and much more.

artsandcul­ture.google.com/ partner/smithsonia­n-nationalmu­seum-of-natural-history

BRITISH MUSEUM IN LONDON

The British Museum in London is dedicated to human history, art and culture. The

collection here has been sourced through the era of the British Empire and is dedicated to human history, art and culture. Its permanent collection spans eight million works, making it the largest and most comprehens­ive collection in existence. On the website, you can navigate between The Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania from 2000AD to 2,000,000BC. You can even narrow down your experience and select from art and design, living and dying, power and identity, religion and belief and lastly, trade and conflict. Navigation can be tricky, so be patient with it as there’s lots to explore and learn.

britishmus­eum.withgoogle. com

THE GETTY MUSEUM

Set some time aside for this one, as the virtual exploratio­n of the Getty Museum’s rooms seems endless, with one room leading to the next. Nonetheles­s, don’t rush through it — there are more than 15,000 items to check out. The collection spans European paintings, drawings, sculpture, illuminate­d manuscript­s, decorative arts, and European, Asian, and American photograph­s. When checking out the informatio­n provided on some of these masterpiec­es, scroll all the way down and enjoy additional videos that delve deeper into the artwork.

artsandcul­ture.google.com/ partner/the-j-paul-gettymuseu­m

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 ??  ?? Louvre Museum in Paris
Louvre Museum in Paris
 ??  ?? Guggenheim in New York
Guggenheim in New York
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 ??  ?? British Museum in London
British Museum in London
 ??  ?? Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art
 ??  ?? The Smithsonia­n
The Smithsonia­n
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 ??  ?? The Getty Museum
The Getty Museum
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