Amit Sood: Building a museum of museums on the web

38,071 views ・ 2011-05-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
My name is Amit.
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And 18 months ago, I had another job at Google,
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and I pitched this idea
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of doing something with museums and art
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to my boss who's actually here,
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and she allowed me to do it.
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And it took 18 months.
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A lot of fun, negotiations and stories, I can tell you,
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with 17 very interesting museums from nine countries.
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But I'm going to focus on the demo.
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There are a lot of stories about why we did this.
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I think my personal story is explained very simply on the slide,
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and it's access.
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And I grew up in India.
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I had a great education -- I'm not complaining --
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but I didn't have access to a lot of these museums and these artworks.
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And so when I started traveling and going to these museums,
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I started learning a lot.
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01:00
And while working at Google,
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I tried to put this desire
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to make it more accessible with technology together.
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So we formed a team, a great team of people,
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and we started doing this.
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I'm going to probably get into the demo
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01:14
and then tell you a couple of the interesting things
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we've had since launch.
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So, simple: you come to GoogleArtProject.com.
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You look around at all these museums here.
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You've got the Uffizi, you've got the MoMA,
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the Hermitage, the Rijks, the Van Gogh.
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I'm going to actually get to one of my favorites,
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the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
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Two ways of going in -- very simple.
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Click and, bang, you're in this museum.
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It doesn't matter where you are --
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Bombay, Mexico, it doesn't really matter.
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You move around, you have fun.
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You want to navigate around the museum?
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Open the plan up,
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and, in one click, jump.
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You're in there, you want to go to the end of the corridor.
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Keep going. Have fun.
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Explore.
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01:57
(Applause)
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02:03
Thanks. I haven't come to the best part.
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02:05
(Laughter)
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02:07
So now I'm in front of one of my favorite paintings,
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"The Harvesters" by Pieter Bruegel at the Met.
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I see this plus sign.
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If the museum has given us the image, you click on it.
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Now this is one of the images.
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So this is all of the meta-data information.
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For those of you who are truly interested in art,
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you can click this -- but I'm going to click this off right now.
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And this is one of these images that we captured
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in what we call gigapixel technology.
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So this image, for example,
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has close to, I think, around 10 billion pixels.
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And I get a lot of people asking me:
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"What do you get for 10 billion pixels?"
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So I'm going to try and show you what you really get for 10 billion pixels.
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You can zoom around very simply.
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You see some fun stuff happening here.
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I love this guy; his expression is priceless.
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But then you really want to go deep.
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And so I started playing around,
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and I found something going on over here.
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And I was like, "Hold on. That sounds interesting."
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Went in, and I started noticing
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that these kids were actually beating something.
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I did a little research, spoke to a couple of my contacts at the Met,
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and actually found out that this is a game
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called squall,
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which involves beating a goose with a stick
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on Shrove Tuesday.
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And apparently it was quite popular.
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I don't know why they did it,
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but I learned something about it.
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Now just to get really deep in, you can really get to the cracks.
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Now just to give you some perspective,
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I'm going to zoom out so you really see what you get.
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Here is where we were,
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and this is the painting.
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03:32
(Applause)
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The best is yet to come -- so in a second.
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So now let's just quickly
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jump into the MoMA, again in New York.
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So another one of my favorites, "The Starry Night."
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Now the example I showed you was all about finding details.
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But what if you want to see brush strokes?
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And what if you want to see
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how Van Gogh actually created this masterpiece?
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You zoom in. You really go in.
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04:01
I'm going to go to one of my favorite parts in this painting,
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and I'm really going to get to the cracks.
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This is "The Starry Night,"
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I think, never seen like this before.
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I'm going to show you my other favorite feature.
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There's a lot of other stuff here, but I don't have time.
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This is the real cool part. It's called Collections.
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Any one of you, anybody --
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doesn't matter if you're rich, if you're poor,
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if you have a fancy house -- doesn't matter.
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You can go and create your own museum online --
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create your own collection across all these images.
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Very simply, you go in --
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and I've created this, called The Power of Zoom --
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you can just zoom around.
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This is "The Ambassadors," based in the National Gallery.
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You can annotate the stuff, send it to your friends
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and really get a conversation going
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about what you're feeling
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when you go through these masterpieces.
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So I think, in conclusion,
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for me, the main thing
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is that all the amazing stuff here does not really come from Google.
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It doesn't, in my opinion, even come from the museums.
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I probably shouldn't say that.
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It really comes from these artists.
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05:01
And that's been my humbling experience in this.
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I mean, I hope in this digital medium
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that we do justice to their artwork
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and represent it properly online.
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05:11
And the biggest question I get asked nowadays
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is, "Did you do this
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to replicate the experience of going to a museum?"
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05:17
And the answer is no.
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It's to supplement the experience.
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05:21
And that's it. Thank you.
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05:23
(Applause)
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05:25
Thank you.
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05:27
(Applause)
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