Abstract

Digital photographic capture of pictorial artworks with gigapixel resolution (around 1000 megapixels or greater) is a novel technique that is beginning to be used by some important international museums as a means of documentation, analysis, and dissemination of their masterpieces. This line of research is extremely interesting, not only for art curators and scholars but also for the general public. The results can be disseminated through online virtual museum displays, offering a detailed interactive visualization. These virtual visualizations allow the viewer to delve into the artwork in such a way that it is possible to zoom in and observe those details, which would be negligible to the naked eye in a real visit. Therefore, this kind of virtual visualization using gigapixel images has become an essential tool to enhance cultural heritage and to make it accessible to everyone. Since today’s professional digital cameras provide images of around 40 megapixels, obtaining gigapixel images requires some special capture and editing techniques. This article describes a series of photographic methodologies and equipment, developed by the team of researchers, that have been put into practice to achieve a very high level of detail and chromatic fidelity, in the documentation and dissemination of pictorial artworks. The result of this research work consisted in the gigapixel documentation of several masterpieces of the Museo de Bellas Artes of Valencia, one of the main art galleries in Spain. The results will be disseminated through the Internet, as will be shown with some examples.

Highlights

  • New techniques for the dissemination of cultural heritage through digital media is one of the lines of research providing benefits to society since the research results can be available to the public by means online virtual museum displays

  • Many important international museums [1], are using these technologies in collaboration with the multinational Google, which has developed its own high-resolution digital capture system for paintings. These works are exhibited on the Arts and Culture Project website [2], which contains many artworks that can be displayed with a high level of detail. They are digital reproductions with a gigapixel resolution, that is, a resolution greater than 1000 megapixels, which is 50 times greater than the image resolution provided by a conventional digital camera

  • Gigapixel images allow documenting and analysing the paintings accurately, which is very useful for curators and art scholars

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Summary

Introduction

New techniques for the dissemination of cultural heritage through digital media is one of the lines of research providing benefits to society since the research results can be available to the public by means online virtual museum displays. After the raw development process, the mosaic was joined using Hugin, a GPL-licensed stitching software, which generated the final image (Figure 13b), with a resolution of 26,511 × 28,520 px, that is, 756 megapixels (0.76 gigapixels).

Results
Conclusion
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