
Art lovers can see thousands of paintings, sculptures, installations and new works online, as well as explore the museums that host them. There are a variety of platforms: from interactive 360-degree videos, "where you can walk" tours around the museum as a guide explains what he is seeing and photos coming up to see details of the world's most famous paintings. Closer you will never see them.
Let's take a quick look at the news and embark on our artistic adventure in California
J Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Google Arts and Culture offers an option to view the museum and the galleries inside it. Artworks can be clicked and under them you will find answers to all your questions. The square of sculptures and the garden on the terrace can be viewed through Xplore.
Vatican Museums, Rome
You can take a virtual tour of the museum's official website, where you can be amazed by the Sistine Chapel through You Visit, the Vatican, the Basilica and St. Peter's Square as a voice guides you and explains 'you see.
Guggenheim, Bilbao
The interactive tour shows visitors postwar American collections and European paintings and sculptures - Rothko, Holzer, Koons, Kapoor.
Natural History Museum, London
Take a stroll through the corridors of London's favorite museum and see extensive exhibits on every aspect of nature through this interactive guide.
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
This museum has an extremely rich collection of artworks and historical objects that fill 80 galleries. The interactive mug allows you to see every brush of Vermeer, Rembrandt and other Danish masters.
National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, South Korea
The museum is divided into several headquarters: the main gallery in Goacheon and other branches in Deoksugung, Seoul and Chengju. The virtual tour explores mass installations, print works, design, sculptures, photography, media and more. From Joseph Beuys to Andy Warhol and Nam June Paik, the collections contain works of art by Korean and world-renowned artists.
Musée d'Orsay, Paris
The museum is home to Cézanne, Monet and other French masters. The virtual tour also includes a history of the building. At Tourist Tube you find 360-degree images of the majestic façade.
British Museum, London
The ceiling of the British Museum has 3,212 glass cartridges and none resemble one another. The 360-degree images in this virtual tour allow you to examine every selfie. The museum's infographic platform, History Connected, delves deeper into the history of the artifacts.
The Museu de Arte de São Paolo, Brazil
This museum has one of the richest historical collections and can all be seen on the virtual gallery platform. The glazed structure and red columns can be found on Google Street View.
National Gallery, London
The museum houses 2300 European paintings, drawings, sketches and works of art dating from the 13th to the mid-20th centuries. You can explore it all on the 360 degree tour.