Google and Lin-Manuel Miranda team up on a project to share Puerto Rican art online

Arts

The Judge (1970), a collograph print by Myrna Báez Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico

The online platform Google Arts and Culture, the actor Lin-Manuel Miranda and his father, Luis Miranda Jr, announced today that they had joined forces to make works by Puerto Rican artists available to a global online audience.

The joint announcement said that over 350 works of art would immediately go online and that more would be added in weeks to come from a trove of over 40,000 artefacts of “great historical and cultural value”. Partners in the project include the Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña (ICP), the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico, the Museo de Arte de Ponce and the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, which has been contributing to the online initiative since 2014.

“My family and I have visited the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture and all of the museum partners, and fell in love with the trove of art available from San Juan to Ponce and everywhere across the island,” Lin-Manuel Miranda, best known as the composer, actor, playwright and producer behind the hit Broadway musical Hamilton, saidin a statement. “Through this project, we hope that the world will get a glimpse of the art treasures of Puerto Rico–and then come visit them in person!”

The actor has been an energetic proponent of Puerto Ricos recovery from the devastation wrought in 2017 by Hurricane Maria. This year he reprised his lead role in Hamilton during a run of the musical on the island to raise money for artists and cultural groups that have been struggling to get by despite efforts at reconstruction. His father is a Puerto Rican native and a prominent political consultant.

Highlights of the digitisation effort include The Judge (1970), a collograph image by the contemporary painter and printmaker Myrna Báez, and The Daughters of Governor Ramón de Castro (1797), a painting by the artist José Campeche y Jordán, the announcement said.

The partners said that some of the works of art to be shared online would be captured in ultra-high resolution by Google Art and Cultures Art Camera, allowing viewers to peruse the images “down to brush stroke level”. So far 48 have been documentedRead More – Source