Tuesday, March 25, 2014

"...How London Looks on Google vs. Paintings From the 1700s"

Too Cool.
From Wired:
Redditor Shystone took Google Street View photos and made composite images using classic paintings of London. Here is the River Thames in present day with Canaletto's painting of the same view in 1746. 
Google’s Street View images bear some similarities to 18th-century landscape paintings. The content is different, of course. What Google’s army of photo collectors captured at Westminster Abbey on any given day in the 21st century will look different than what Italian painter Canaletto saw back in the 1700s. But they’re both a representation of an exact moment in time, which makes them a handy way to compare now and then if you can isolate the right locations.

Redditor Shystone has laid old paintings over Google Street View photographs to create a series of perspective-bending composite images of old and new London. Modern sculptures dominate a plaza that was once wide open; neon signs reside on the same block as gas-lit streetlights; and a bridge covers over a river that was once filled with sailboats....MORE
london1
Canaletto’s painting of Westminster Abbey from 1749 is overlaid on an image from Google Street View. Image: Shystone

Readers who have been with us for a while have probably noted a fascination with Canaletto:
The Hedge Funds of the Art World
Break Out Your Canaletto's: Southern Europe is Doomed
Denver Museum Discovers It Has a Treasure in the Storage Bin
 ...England's Royal Collection has one of the largest assemblages of Canaletto's including a whole bunch (technical term) of the Venice scenes.
This find puts the score at:
Queen of England-274---Denver Art Museum-1.
http://www.kunstkopie.de/kunst/canaletto_eigentl_giovanni_an/1007744.jpg
Giovanni Antonio Canal (Canaletto) - Rome, staircase to the Campodoglio.