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Every piece of art you've ever wanted to see -- up close and searchable

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    The world is filled
    with incredible objects
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    and rich cultural heritage.
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    And when we get access to them,
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    we are blown away, we fall in love.
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    But most of the time,
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    the world's population is living
    without real access to arts and culture.
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    What might the connections be
    when we start exploring our heritage,
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    the beautiful locations
    and the art in this world?
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    Before we get started
    in this presentation,
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    I just want to take care
    of a few housekeeping points.
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    First, I am no expert in art or culture.
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    I fell into this by mistake,
    but I'm loving it.
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    Secondly, all of what
    I'm going to show you
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    belongs to the amazing museums,
    archives and foundations
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    that we partner with.
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    None of this belongs to Google.
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    And finally, what you see behind me
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    is available right now
    on your mobile phones,
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    on your laptops.
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    This is our current platform,
    where you can explore
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    thousands of museums
    and objects at your fingertips,
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    in extremely high-definition detail.
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    The diversity of the content
    is what's amazing.
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    If we just had European paintings,
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    if we just had modern art,
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    I think it gets a bit boring.
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    For example, this month,
    we launched the "Black History" channel
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    with 82 curated exhibitions,
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    which talk about arts and culture
    in that community.
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    We also have some
    amazing objects from Japan,
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    centered around craftsmanship,
    called "Made in Japan."
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    And one of my favorite exhibitions,
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    which actually is the idea of my talk,
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    is -- I didn't expect to become
    a fan of Japanese dolls.
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    But I am, thanks to this exhibition,
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    that has really taught me
    about the craftsmanship
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    behind the soul of a Japanese doll.
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    Trust me, it's very exciting.
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    Take my word for it.
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    So, moving on swiftly.
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    One quick thing I wanted
    to showcase in this platform,
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    which you can share with your kids
    and your friends right now,
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    is you can travel to all these
    amazing institutions virtually, as well.
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    One of our recent ideas was with
    The Guggenheim Museum in New York,
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    where you can get a taste
    of what it might feel like
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    to actually be there.
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    You can go to the ground floor
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    and obviously, most of you,
    I assume, have been there.
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    And you can see the architectural
    masterpiece that it is.
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    But imagine this accessibility
    for a kid in Bombay
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    who's studying architecture,
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    who hasn't had a chance
    to go to The Guggenheim as yet.
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    You can obviously look at objects
    in the Guggenheim Museum,
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    you can obviously get into them
    and so on and so forth.
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    There's a lot of information here.
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    But this is not the purpose
    of my talk today.
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    This exists right now.
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    What we now have are the building blocks
    to a very exciting future,
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    when it comes to arts and culture
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    and accessibility to arts and culture.
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    So I am joined today onstage
    by my good friend and artist in residence
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    at our office in Paris, Cyril Diagne,
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    who is the professor of interactive design
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    at ECAL University
    in Lausanne, Switzerland.
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    What Cyril and our team
    of engineers have been doing
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    is trying to find these connections
    and visualize a few of these.
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    So I'm going to go quite quick now.
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    This object you see
    behind me -- oh, just clarification:
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    Always, seeing the real thing is better.
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    In case people think
    I'm trying to replicate the real thing.
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    So, moving on.
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    This object you see behind me
    is the Venus of Berekhat Ram.
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    It's one of the oldest
    objects in the world,
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    found in the Golan Heights
    around 233,000 years ago,
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    and currently residing
    at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.
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    It is also one of the oldest
    objects on our platform.
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    So let's zoom.
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    We start from this one object.
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    What if we zoomed out
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    and actually tried to experience
    our own cultural big bang?
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    What might that look like?
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    This is what we deal with on a daily basis
    at the Cultural Institute --
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    over six million cultural artifacts
    curated and given to us by institutions,
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    to actually make these connections.
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    You can travel through time,
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    you can understand more
    about our society through these.
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    You can look at it
    from the perspective of our planet,
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    and try to see how
    it might look without borders,
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    if we just organized art and culture.
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    We can also then plot it by time,
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    which obviously, for the data geek
    in me, is very fascinating.
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    You can spend hours
    looking at every decade
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    and the contributions
    in that decade and in those years
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    for art, history and cultures.
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    We would love to spend hours
    showing you each and every decade,
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    but we don't have the time right now.
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    So you can go on your phone
    and actually do it yourself.
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    (Applause)
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    But if you don't mind
    and can hold your applause till later,
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    I don't want to run out of time,
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    because I want to show you
    a lot of cool stuff.
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    So, just very quickly:
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    you can move on from here
    to another very interesting idea.
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    Beyond the pretty picture,
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    beyond the nice visualization,
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    what is the purpose, how is this useful?
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    This next idea comes
    from discussions with curators
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    that we've been having at museums,
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    who, by the way, I've fallen in love with,
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    because they dedicate their whole life
    to try to tell these stories.
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    One of the curators told me,
    "Amit, what would it be like
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    if you could create
    a virtual curator's table
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    where all these six million objects
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    are displayed in a way for us
    to look at the connections between them?"
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    You can spend a lot of time, trust me,
    looking at different objects
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    and understanding where they come from.
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    It's a crazy Matrix experience.
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    (Laughter)
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    Just moving on,
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    let's take the world-famous
    Vincent Van Gogh,
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    who is very well-represented
    on this platform.
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    Thanks to the diversity
    of the institutions we have,
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    we have over 211 high-definition,
    amazing artworks by this artist,
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    now organized in one beautiful view.
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    And as it resolves,
    and as Cyril goes deeper,
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    you can see all the self-portraits,
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    you can see still life.
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    But I just wanted to highlight
    one very quick example,
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    which is very timely:
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    "The Bedroom."
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    This is an artwork
    where three copies exist --
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    one at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam,
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    one at the Orsay in Paris
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    and one at the Art Institute of Chicago,
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    which, actually, currently
    is hosting a reunion
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    of all three artworks physically,
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    I think only for the second time ever.
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    But, it is united digitally and virtually
    for anybody to look at
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    in a very different way,
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    and you won't get pushed
    in the line in the crowd.
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    So let's take you and let's travel
    through "The Bedroom" very quickly,
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    so you can experience what we are doing
    for every single object.
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    We want the image to speak
    as much as it can
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    on a digital platform.
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    And all you need is an internet
    connection and a computer
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    (Applause)
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    And, Cyril, if you can go deeper, quickly.
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    I'm sorry, this is all live,
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    so you have to give Cyril
    a little bit of --
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    and this is available for every object:
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    modern art, contemporary art,
    Renaissance -- you name it,
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    even sculpture.
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    Sometimes, you don't know
    what can attract you
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    to an artwork or to a museum
    or to a cultural discovery.
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    So for me, personally,
    it was quite a challenge
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    because when I decided to make this
    my full-time job at Google,
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    my mother was not very supportive.
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    I love my mother,
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    but she thought I was wasting my life
    with this museum stuff.
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    And for her, a museum is what
    you do when you go on vacation
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    and you tick-mark and it's over, right?
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    And it took around four and a half years
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    for me to convince my lovely Indian mother
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    that actually, this is worthwhile.
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    And the way I did it was,
    I realized one day that she loves gold.
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    So I started showing her all objects
    that have the material gold in them.
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    And the first thing my mom asks me is,
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    "How can we buy these?"
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    (Laughter)
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    And obviously, my salary is not that high,
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    so I was like, "We can't
    actually do that, mom.
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    But you can explore them virtually."
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    And so now my mom -- every time
    I meet her, she asks me,
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    "Any more gold, any more silver
    in your project? Can you show me?"
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    And that's the idea
    I'm trying to illustrate.
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    It does not matter how you get in,
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    as long as you get in.
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    Once you get in, you're hooked.
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    Moving on from here very quickly,
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    there is kind of a playful idea, actually,
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    to illustrate the point of access,
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    and I'm going to go
    quite quickly on this one.
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    We all know that seeing the artwork
    in person is amazing.
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    But we also know
    that most of us can't do it,
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    and the ones that can afford
    to do it, it's complicated.
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    So -- Cyril, can we load
    up our art trip, what do we call it?
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    We don't have a good name for this.
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    But essentially, we have
    around 1,000 amazing institutions,
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    68 countries.
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    But let's start with Rembrandt.
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    We might have time for only one example.
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    But thanks to the diversity,
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    we've got around 500 amazing
    Rembrandt object artworks
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    from 46 institutions and 17 countries.
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    Let's say that on your next vacation,
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    you want to go see
    every single one of them.
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    That is your itinerary,
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    you will probably travel
    53,000 kilometers,
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    visit around, I think, 46 institutions,
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    and just FYI, you might release
    10 tons of CO2 emissions.
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    (Laughter)
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    But remember, it's art,
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    so you can justify it,
    perhaps, in some way.
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    Moving on swiftly from here,
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    is something a little bit
    more technical and more interesting.
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    All that we've shown you so far
    uses metadata to make the connections.
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    But obviously we have
    something cool nowadays
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    that everyone likes to talk about,
    which is machine learning.
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    So what we thought is,
    let's strip out all the metadata,
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    let's look at what machine learning can do
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    based purely on visual recognition
    of this entire collection.
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    What we ended up with
    is this very interesting map,
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    these clusters that have
    no reference point information,
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    but has just used visuals
    to cluster things together.
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    Each cluster is an art to us
    by itself of discovery.
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    But one of the clusters we want
    to show you very quickly
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    is this amazing cluster of portraits
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    that we found from museums
    around the world.
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    If you could zoom in
    a little bit more, Cyril.
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    Just to show you, you can
    just travel through portraits.
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    And essentially, you can do nature,
    you can do horses
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    and clusters galore.
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    When we saw all these portraits,
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    we were like, "Hey, can we do
    something fun for kids,
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    or can we do something playful
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    to get people interested in portraits?"
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    Because I haven't really seen
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    young kids really excited
    to go to a portrait gallery.
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    I wanted to try to figure something out.
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    So we created something
    called the portrait matcher.
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    It's quite self-explnatory,
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    so I'm just going to let Cyril
    show his beautiful face.
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    And essentially what's happening is,
    with the movement of his head,
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    we are matching different portraits
    around the world from museums.
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    (Applause)
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    And I don't know about you,
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    but I've shown it to my nephew and sister,
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    and the reaction is just phenomenal.
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    All they ask me is,
    "When can we go see this?"
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    And by the way, if we're nice,
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    maybe, Cyril, you can smile
    and find a happy one?
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    Oh, perfect.
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    By the way, this is not rehearsed.
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    Congrats, Cyril. Great stuff. Oh wow.
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    OK, let's move on; otherwise,
    this will just take the whole time.
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    (Applause)
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    So, art and culture
    can be fun also, right?
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    For our last quick experiment --
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    we call all of these "experiments" --
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    our last quick experiment
    comes back to machine learning.
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    We show you clusters, visual clusters,
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    but what if we could ask the machine
    to also name these clusters?
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    What if it could automatically tag
    them, using no actual metadata?
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    So what we have is this kind of explorer,
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    where we have managed to match,
    I think, around 4,000 labels.
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    And we haven't really
    done anything special here,
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    just fed the collection.
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    And we found interesting categories.
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    We can start with horses,
    a very straightforward category.
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    You would expect to see
    that the machine has put
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    images of horses, right?
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    And it has, but you also notice,
    right over there,
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    that it has a very abstract image
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    that it has still managed to recognize
    and cluster as horses.
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    We also have an amazing head
    in terms of a horse.
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    And each one has the tags
    as to why it got categorized in this.
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    So let's move to another one
    which I found very funny and interesting,
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    because I don't understand
    how this category came up.
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    It's called "Lady in Waiting."
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    If, Cyril, you do it very quickly,
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    you will see that we have
    these amazing images
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    of ladies, I guess, in waiting or posing.
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    I don't really understand it.
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    But I've been trying to ask
    my museum contacts,
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    you know, "What is this?
    What's going on here?"
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    And it's fascinating.
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    Coming back to gold very quickly,
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    I wanted to search for gold
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    and see how the machine
    tagged all the gold.
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    But, actually, it doesn't tag it as gold.
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    We are living in popular times.
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    It tags it as "bling-bling."
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm being hard on Cyril,
    because I'm moving too fast.
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    Essentially, here you have
    all the bling-bling
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    of the world's museums organized for you.
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    And finally, to end this talk
    and these experiments,
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    what I hope you feel after this talk
    is happiness and emotion.
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    And what would we see
    when we see happiness?
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    If we actually look at all the objects
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    that have been tagged under "happiness,"
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    you would expect happiness, I guess.
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    But there was one that came up
    that was very fascinating and interesting,
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    which was this artwork
    by Douglas Coupland,
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    our friend and artist
    in residence as well,
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    called, "I Miss My Pre-Internet Brain."
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    I don't know why the machine feels like
    it misses its pre-Internet brain
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    and it's been tagged here,
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    but it's a very interesting thought.
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    I sometimes do miss my pre-Internet brain,
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    but not when it comes to exploring
    arts and culture online.
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    So take out your phones,
    take out your computers,
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    go visit museums.
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    And just a quick call-out
    to all the amazing archivists,
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    historians, curators,
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    who are sitting in museums,
    preserving all this culture.
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    And the least we can do is get
    our daily dose of art and culture
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    for ourselves and our kids.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Every piece of art you've ever wanted to see -- up close and searchable
Speaker:
Amit Sood
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:00

English subtitles

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