Tag Archives: Arts and Culture

An art gallery in your pocket: See Vermeer’s paintings in augmented reality

Over 28 years ago, two art thieves dressed as police officers made their way into the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and stole multiple artworks, including a Vermeer painting that was one of only 36 attributed to the artist. With an estimated value of over $200 million, “The Concert” remains one of the most expensive missing items on the FBI’s list of stolen art. With the rest of Vermeer’s masterpieces scattered across 17 collections in seven countries, people have never had the opportunity to see all of Vermeer’s works in one place. And since some of his works are now too fragile to travel, they’ll have to remain where they are indefinitely.

But now, you can experience all of Vermeer's known artworks in one place for the first time. Thanks to the Mauritshuis museum in the Netherlands and other cultural institutions guarding Vermeer’s legacy, they’re available in Pocket Gallery, a brand new feature on the Google Arts & Culture app. Pocket Gallery uses augmented reality, so you can pull out your phone and step into a virtual exhibition space to see all of his works, curated by experts from the Mauritshuis. All 36 of his paintings—including the missing masterpiece and the famous “Girl with a Pearl Earring”—hang lifesize and perfectly lit. As you step closer, you’ll see each painting in stunning detail and can learn more about each piece.   

The Art Camera—our ultra-high resolution robotic camera made specifically for artworks—was deployed to several galleries around the world, creating the highest-ever resolution image of eight of Vermeer’s masterpieces for your zooming pleasure. You can also dive into “in painting tours” of each Vermeer’s 36 works and enjoy the guided insights into artworks like Girl with a Flute. In addition to Vermeer’s paintings, you’ll be able to explore several expert stories that shed light on Vermeer's art, legacy or mysterious life—for instance, you can hear from Tracy Chevalier, author of the bestseller “Girl with a Pearl Earring.”

Today, Vermeer resonates in pop culture references around the world. Justin Richburg—who recently created the character designs for Childish Gambino’s music video “Feels like Summer”—conceived an original piece of art that bridges time and cultures: “Icons” reimagines Vermeer in the 21st century, and shows how the subjects of his paintings have become icons themselves.

justinrichburg

Icons by Justin Richburg.

You can experience Vermeer’s work in a variety of formats—whether it’s an interactive coloring book on Instagram or an original series with YouTube Creators. To see Vermeer’s paintings hanging where they currently are, you can also check out Street View photography in galleries worldwide to navigate the halls of the Frick Collection (New York) and Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam). Visit g.co/meetvermeer, join the conversation with #MeetVermeer or download the app on either iOSor Android to try out Pocket Gallery.

AI brings “dreams” to life at the Walt Disney Concert Hall

Walt Disney Concert Hall (WDCH) has been home to the Los Angeles Philharmonic since 2003. When architect Frank Gehry designed the Concert Hall, he hoped that the beauty of the music created within its walls would one day be reflected on the outside. So to mark the Philharmonic’s 100-year anniversary this fall, artist Refik Anadol collaborated with the Artists and Machine Intelligence Program at Google Arts and Culture and the Philharmonic to pay tribute to the past and to “dream” what’s to come in the future.

Along with Google engineers, Refik used machine learning to interpret nearly 45 terabytes of data, comprised of audio recordings of past performances, and historic images from the LA Philharmonic’s archive, like photographs and printed programs. Using multiple machine learning algorithms, he identified patterns in the images and create narratives—“dreams”—from these compositions, with the vision of projecting them onto the music hall itself.

WDCH Dreams

To visualize 18,000 hours of audio recordings, computational artist and researcher Parag K. Metal developed an audio browser tool to explore the archive by 256 attributes such as pitch, timbre, amplitude, tempo, tonality and key. Using this tool, Refik and sound designers Kerim Karaoglu and Robert Thomas hand-picked specific “memories” and curated a unique soundtrack that accompanied the visual narrative, called WDCH Dreams.

The 12-minute projection premiered this September, and illuminated downtown Los Angeles for eight days, every 30 minutes from 7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Until October 2019, visitors can explore the LA Philharmonic’s archives in an interactive exhibition at the Walt Disney Concert Hall, in the Ira Gershwin Gallery. Discover more about the LA Philharmonic and WDCH Dreams onGoogle Arts and Culture —or download our free app for iOS or Android.

HRH The Prince of Wales’ 70th Birthday: Art, Culture, Heritage

Digital innovation has not only introduced new forms of art but is also a critical means to preserving society’s art and heritage for future generations to explore and enjoy. Now through a new online project on Google Arts & Culture, people all over the world can explore heritage, art, craftsmanship and architecture through the work of The Prince of Wales and the charities he supports.

On the occasion of The Prince of Wales’ 70th birthday on November 14th, Google Arts & Culture has partnered with Clarence House and ten charities connected to The Prince to unveil a new online initiative that documents The Prince’s extraordinary life and support for art and cultural heritage in Britain and around the world. With input and insights from The Royal Collection Trust, The Prince’s Foundation, Turquoise Mountain Trust and The Royal Drawing School among others, The Charities of The Prince of Wales provides unique and exclusive access to many of the curators, custodians and artists associated with The Prince of Wales.

Explore Prince Charles's art collection

Delving into the site, people all over the world can walk the halls of Clarence House in Street View imagery for the very first time, stroll the gardens of Highgrove (The Prince’s private residence) in 360 degrees, study hundreds of historical artworks belonging to The Royal Collection  and discover  Dumfries House, The Estate saved for the nation by The Prince of Wales. The tour of Dumfries House includes views of its priceless collection of Chippendale furniture and personal insights from the on-site curators. To allow access to people from around the world, there is also now a Clarence House Google Expedition designed especially for schoolchildren who can use Google’s Virtual Reality storytelling tool to walk through the explore Clarence House in detail.

Collaboration with The Princes’ Charities has also allowed Google Arts & Culture to share unique access to much of The Prince’s  own art collection and that of The Royal Collection Trust, handpicked for digitisation for this project. Over 40 artworks now can be seen in gigapixel resolution, including three of The Prince’s own watercolours, a portrait Queen Elizabeth II as a young girl (Philip de László), and eight masterpieces documenting Windsor Castle, by the British artist John Piper. In addition, the Royal Drawing School and School of Traditional Arts also come online to share a more contemporary set of artists’ stories and collections for visitors to explore.

Now, anyone anywhere can also enjoy a rarely seen family photo album including photographs of Prince Charles as a young boy with Queen Elizabeth, relaxed family photographs with his own grandchildren and children, and even one of a very young Princess Anne and Prince Charles meeting David Attenborough in the 1950s.

The Prince of Wales’ passion for heritage preservation is well known. Google Arts & Culture will also feature a new exhibit that offers a deep dive into the history of Afghan heritagethrough the lens of one of —The Turquoise Mountain Trust founded by The Prince. The exhibit explores the engaging stories of local Afghan culture, via new interactive 3D models of art, crafts and historical items, and virtual tours.

Learn more about The Charities of The Prince of Wales and the men and women around the world who work on projects in heritage, conservation, and the arts by exploring the exhibition on Google Arts & Culture and on our iOS and Android apps. For more information on The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall visit: https://www.princeofwales.gov.uk/.

Sharing stories of service and sacrifice for Veterans Day


As a Surface Warfare Officer in the U.S. Navy, I remember spending multiple deployments out at sea, on a ship, sailing off the coast of Central and South America. The days were long, and the nights even longer, as we spent up to nine months away from friends and family. Although the deployments were sometimes dangerous, and we were away from home, we knew that it was part of the greater mission of protecting our country.

Millions of Americans throughout history have made a commitment to protect our country, and to better understand their impact and sacrifice, we’re amplifying their voices and sharing their stories. And we want you to help.

To do this, we’re partnering with StoryCorps, whose mission is to preserve and collect humanity’s stories. When you download the Storycorps app, you can interview a veteran in your life, and archive their oral history. Once you share your story, it will be sent to the Library of Congress where it will be kept for future generations to learn about their achievement and sacrifice.

Thanks to our partnership with Storycorps, today’s Doodle features stories from five veterans, including the first African-American woman to serve in the Coast Guard, and of an Army Sergeant who was reunited with the medic who saved his life ten years later. Guest animators Alicia and Emory Allen, both  children of veterans, lent their talents to create original artwork for the stories and the Doodle.

Nineteen-year-old YouTube creator Andy Fancher has spent the last three years telling veterans’ stories—he’s interviewed more than 70 WWII combat veterans for his YouTube channel, “Andy Fancher Presents.” Andy’s interest in documenting veterans’ stories started after he found a photograph of his late great-grandfather and realized his experience as a soldier hadn’t been preserved. Now, YouTubers like Andy can use the StoryCorps app to capture their own veteran stories.

Veterans Voices | Listening is Honoring

Veterans Day is also International Armistice Day, commemorating the end of World War I.  In partnership with the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, MO, Google Arts and Culture has digitized and uploaded hundreds of historical documents, posters, and photographs. Now you can learn more about the origins of Veterans Day through exhibits about the armistice centennial or the significance of iconic WWI posters. You can also tour the museum’s grounds and interior, and explore the Museum in virtual reality with Google Cardboard tours narrated by the Museum’s curators and a retired Colonel.

Veterans are heroes among us, and these new efforts—across our platforms—can help to make sure that their legacy of service and sacrifice is preserved well into the future.

New ways to experience The Met on Google Arts & Culture

In 2011, a small team of Google engineers launched the Art Project - a pilot project that had one goal: exploring how to provide anyone, anywhere, with new ways to experience culture. This project was built in collaboration with 17 museums around the world, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art was one of the first on board.

Fast forward seven years: the Art Project has grown into Google Arts & Culture, an app and website that partners with 1,500+ museums and cultural institutions from over 70 countries to give people access to diverse cultural heritage from around the world. .

And we have been privileged to regularly collaborate on exciting initiatives with The Met, such as ‘we wear culture’ a project that invites audiences around the globe to step inside the world's largest costume collection - The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute - and discover its Conservation Laboratory in 360 degrees to see what it takes to preserve these objects for future generations.

Meanwhile, The Met has remained at the forefront of innovation, continuously exploring the possibilities offered by the newest technologies and at times helping our team to understand how to develop new solutions for museums.

Today, we are excited to announce our latest collaboration with The Met, as we incorporate The Met’s Open Access program onto the Google Arts & Culture platform, allowing people to discover over 200,000 Creative Commons Zero artworks, including “William” the hippo and “Olive Trees” by Van Gogh. Now, people will be able to use Google Arts & Culture features, like browsing for art by time or color, to explore The Met’s collection.

On its own, the addition of The Met’s renowned collection is worth celebrating, but we’re especially excited that this collection will seamlessly grow, thanks to the launch of The Met Collection API, which enables Google Arts & Culture to sustainably integrate The Met collection into the platform, also ensuring up-to-date versions of images and data are available to users.

To further enhance users’ experience, The Met also offered to collaborate on the creation of a new download option. So whether you teach art or study it, are an enthusiast or professional, or are simply a bit curious -- now you have hundreds of thousands of artworks to download, remix, and share.

Start exploring by visiting The Met collection on g.co/arts or download the app on either iOS or Android to browse, download, or learn more about over 200,000 works of art from The Met’s collection.

The culture that connects Europe

Oktoberfest, stilettos or tea leaves—do Europeans have a common way to party, dress, or even look into the future? What hobbies, celebrations or beliefs do they share?


Google Arts & Culture has always been focused on making culture from all over the world accessible to people everywhere. Over the last seven years we’ve partnered with hundreds of European cultural institutions to bring their heritage online. Now we’ve brought together collections from across the continent—from masterpieces to iconic monuments to traditional costumes—all to celebrate the European Year of Cultural Heritage. This year-long initiative from the European Commission highlights European heritage and celebrates cultures across the continent.


Together we created “The culture that connects us,” a unique digital experience that lets everyone dive into centuries of European arts and culture, highlighting the stories, masterpieces and places that connect us beyond our national differences.


Tibor Navracsics, EU Commissioner for Education, Youth and Sport, says of the exhibit: “The European Year of Cultural Heritage in 2018 is a celebration that has already captured the imagination of more than 3.6 million people in 36 countries. I am delighted to see the support, interest and enthusiasm that the Year is generating. Its purpose is to encourage more people to come together to discover and experience Europe's rich cultural heritage. I hope that the launch of this video and project page today will inspire even more people—especially young people—to preserve our cultural heritage and use it as a basis to express their own creativity. After all, the future of our shared heritage is in the hands of the younger generations, as they are the guardians of this exceptional and irreplaceable wealth.”    


Online exhibits from more than 800 cultural institutions, 2,900+ pieces of ultra-high resolution artwork, and 1,000 iconic locations captured in Street View offer a window into the diversity and richness of European culture. These exhibits reveal unexpected stories about street art festivals, fortune-telling and food in art history. Discover more Greek gods, the world's most famous kiss from Austria, and the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles.


The exhibit is not only a visual experience. We challenged seven European YouTube creators to hunt for sounds that expressed their culture and their heritage. While Polish Krzysztof Gonciarz went for the typical “beep” of public transport, Jonna Jinton from Sweden performed a mesmerizing traditional herding call. The pop of a wine bottle and the crackle of bread came from French Revues du Monde, while Cane Secco collected the sound of buzzing Italian Piazza di Trevi. We combined this collection of sounds to form a single music track that encapsulates the sound of Europe.
The sound of us | #EuropeForCulture

We’re proud to have worked with the European Commission and our partners to highlight European heritage and celebrate the many cultures that thrive in Europe today.  Find your connections during the European Year of Cultural Heritage at g.co/europeforculture.

Berlin and Babylon meet on an Island of Museums

Nearly 120 years ago, the excavation of Babylon led to the discovery of the 2,600-year-old Ishtar Gate. Today, visitors to Berlin can marvel at a reconstruction of the gate using its original blue bricks, on display in the Pergamon Museum.

Google Arts & Culture and the Staatliche Museen Berlin, in collaboration with CyArk and World Monuments Fund, have used modern technology to build a virtual bridge between Babylon and Berlin, virtually integrating Ishtar Gate into its original location in Iraq. Now anyone, anywhere can explore the story of its discovery and reconstruction in VR with Google Cardboard.

The Pergamon Museum is one of several institutions that makes up the unique ensemble of the Berlin Museum Island, and we’ve also worked with four other museums to add their collections to Google Arts & Culture. Their combined online exhibits contain more than 4,000 objects covering more than 6,000 years of art and cultural history—including such masterpieces as the Monk by the Sea by Caspar David Friedrich, the Golden hat and the bust of Nefertiti.

You can also explore Museum Island’s treasures through the lens of themes like wanderlust, vanity and body image, YOLO, modern romance, female empowerment, and rebellion.

Start your tour of Museum Island with Arts & Culture on the web, or with our free Arts & Culture app on your Android phone or iOS.

Next Junction: Explore Indian Railways with Google Arts & Culture

Over 151,000 kilometres of track, 7,000 stations, 1.3 million employees and 160 years of history. Indian Railways is one of the most celebrated railway networks in the world. A few months ago, we celebrated the 400th Indian train station connecting to the internet with Google Station, our public Wi-Fi program. Today, we’re bringing Indian Railways’ heritage and sights to the entire world. The most gorgeous architecture, iconic trains and charismatic personalities of Indian Railways can now be found on Google Arts & Culture.


The first rail journey in India, a 14-coach train from Bombay to Thane in 1853 ushered in a new era of an India connected by track, rendering previously remote villages accessible. A century and a half later, just as trains once opened passages across the subcontinent, Google Arts & Culture’s new project  “The Railways — Lifeline of a Nation” is making these passages accessible for the world to experience.


Anyone can now explore India’s railways in unprecedented detail with over 100 exhibitions that bring together more than 3,000 images, 150 videosand 150 iconic locationsacross India. Zoom into ultra-high resolution images made with our Art Camera, like maps of the East Indian Railwaysthat the British used to connect Calcutta with the North West Provinces; get a 360 degree look around the workshops of cardboard rail model enthusiasts; or take a behind the scenes peek at Darjeeling loco shed.

We invite everyone to take an online journey with us to see the breathtaking sights of India’s railways on Google Arts & Culture’sonline platform and the free Google Arts & Culture mobile app on Android and iOS.

No need to dig, here are 20 treasures from Google Arts & Culture

One of the oldest man-made artifacts in the world. An AI powered cultural Big Bang. The tiniest brushstrokes—almost invisible to the human eye—in an impressionist masterpiece. The secrets of traditional sushi making.These are just a few of the hidden treasures you can explore on Google Arts & Culture, which makes millions of artifacts and works of art, shared by over 1,500 museums, archives and cultural institution partners from 70 countries available for you to explore.

Google Arts & Culture started back in 2011, and if Google’s mission is to make the world’s information more accessible, then Arts & Culture aims to make more culture accessible to anyone, anywhere. Since the early days, we’ve collaborated with partner institutions as varied as Japan’s Tezuka Osama Museum, Brazil’s Inhotim Museum and the U.S. National Parks. In many cases, we’ve collaborated with the cultural sector to build special technologies designed to bring their stories to life for the digital world—from our trolley to Cardboard to the Art Camera to a little thing we call the Art Selfie and state-of-the-art AI experiments.

But enough talk. While it’s nearly impossible to choose the best highlights from this massive collection, it’s time to take a quick tour through 20 of Google Arts & Culture’s hidden treasures:

1. One of the world’s oldest works of art. 
This figurine found in Berekhat Ram in Israel is believed to be 233,000 years old. Microscopic analyses have proved that it was shaped by human hands—apparently the first artists in the world. 

1. Figurine from Berekhat Ram – The Israel Museum.jpg

Figurine from Berekhat Ram – The Israel Museum

2. A city full of temples, preserved through 3D.
In 2016, an earthquake damaged many of the temples in Bagan, Myanmar. Working with CyArk, a nonprofit that works to preserve 3D digital archives of at-risk monuments, we’ve made it possible for people to go on a virtual tour of the city of a thousand temples, as well as other heritage sites around the world.

3. Fantastic beasts from long ago.
You don’t need dino DNA to come face to face with prehistoric predators. It’s a lot safer to meet colossal sea dragons and other prehistoric creatures in VR.

4. The stilettos of an American icon.
There are few icons as iconic as Marilyn Monroe. And Monroe’s sparkling red stilettos, designed by Salvatore Ferragamo, are more than a fashion statement—they’re a feat of engineering. As part of a project exploring the past and present of fashion, you can see these red pumps up close and learn the story behind this shoe and thousands of other fashion pieces.

5. Your art doppelganger.
With the Art Selfie, you might discover similarities between yourself and the Emperor Gojong or Claude Monet’s wife.

6. The world’s most famous kiss.

“The Kiss,” arguably the most popular work by Gustav Klimt, was first exhibited in 1908. It is one of the icons of European modern art, representing the culmination of the phase known as the “Golden Epoch.” With gigapixel technology, you can zoom in to see each gilded detail.

7. Klimt_Kiss.gif

The Kiss – Gustav Klimt

7. A track lost to history.
The original phonograph of Louis Armstrong’s “Tiger Rag” may have disappeared from memory but for Deutsche Grammophon. We worked with the record label—the world’s first—to restore and digitize their sound archives and tell the story of Emile Berliner, who invented the grammophon player.

8. What a freedom fighter takes home.
Upon his release from Victor Verster Prison, Nelson Mandela’s belongings were gathered up, inventoried, and signed over to a member of his release team. Included on the list is a surfboard. Mandela took great pleasure in being allowed to go swimming—but every time Mandela went in the water, warder Jack Swart had to go in with him. Swart wasn’t an adept swimmer, so Mandela requested a “boogie-board” for him to try.

9. The private home of a celebrated female artist.
The personal life of Frida Kahlo was the subject of many of her works and remains fascinating to this day. And the house where Kahlo was born, lived and died is in many ways a physical reflection of her creative mind, as a sanctuary and inspiration for the artist. We captured the La Casa Azul on Street View with the Trolley for anyone to explore.

10. A piece of space history.

The Space Shuttle Discover is one of NASA’s most notable orbiters. Discovery was used to deploy the Hubble Space Telescope in 1990—one of 39 missions in 25 years of service. And you can step into space exploration history with a tour of Discover in virtual reality, alongside two astronauts who helped deliver Hubble to orbit.

11. Astronaut on an EVA – Smithsonian_s National Air and Space Museum.jpg

Astronaut on an EVA – Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum

11. Age-old lessons in craftsmanship, rediscovered.                                                      
Japan's traditional craftsmanship is world-renowned, and few things capture the beauty and mastery as much as the making of "Arita ware."

12. The sights and sounds of Rio de Janeiro’s comunidades.
Take an interactive 360° bike ride to explore the some of the most vibrant—and previously unmapped—neighborhoods of Rio de Janeiro and meet some truly inspiring cariocas.

13. A legendary queen.
Nefertiti—whose name means “the Beautiful One Has Come”—was one of the most powerful and influential women in Ancient Egypt. Her bust, on display in the Neue Museum on Berlin’s Museum Island, is completely unique—no other Ancient Egyptian stone bust like it is known.

14. The hidden connections between artworks.
They say any two people in the world can be connected through friends of friends, in just a few steps. How about artworks? Using machine learning to analyze the visual features of artworks, the experiment X Degrees of Separation finds pathways between any two artifacts, connecting the two through a chain of artworks.

15. The tallest Gandhi in the world

In 2014, the headquarters of the Delhi Police was the site for an unprecedented collaboration between a government body and street art. The artists Anpu and Hendrick ECB collaborated on a portrait of Gandhi so huge—152 feet tall—that it required the tallest industrial crane available in India to complete it. 

16. The (original) bedrooms—virtually reunited.
Van Gogh was a prolific correspondent as well as artist, writing many letters and postcards throughout his lifetime. These often included the first sketches of many of his most famous masterpieces—including a drawing of the world-famous The Bedroom, included in a letter dated 17 October 1888 to Paul Gauguin.

16. Autograph Letter and Bedroom.jpg

Left: Autograph letter, dated 17 October 1888, to Paul Gauguin – The Morgan Library & Museum. Right: The Bedroom – Van Gogh Museum

17. The philosophy, in ink, of one of Confucius’ most distinguished pupils.
The most important collection of artwork in Chinese history is held in the Palace Museum inside the Forbidden City, home to 24 emperors for nearly 500 years. One of the collection’s oldest surviving pieces is this calligraphy by renownedOuyang Xun about Confucius’ most distinguished student Bu Shang. 

18. The design process behind one of the world’s most recognizable landmarks.
Architect Jørn Utzon took inspiration from nature to design the shelled roof of the iconic Sydney Opera House. In this exhibit, you can see how early designs with a lower roof profile evolved into the upright design we recognize today. The final design was the result of three years of experimentation, and each shell was derived from the shape of a sphere.

19. A revolution in the making.
A Scrapbook compiled by the Suffragette Ada Flatman draws you into the struggle for women's rights—from 18th-century activists to modern-day trailblazers. Discover never-before-seen news cuttings, flyers and photographs from the Suffragette movement in the Road to Equality exhibit.

20. Art criticism—from an unexpected source.

Three paintings. Two art experts. One kid. Can the competing art experts correctly guess famous paintings based off a kid's descriptions? That’s the idea behind the video series Name That Art.

Discover more treasures on Google Arts & Culture—or download our free app for iOS or Android.

#ThisisFamily: how we’re celebrating Pride

It’s the middle of the middle month of a choppy year and I’m thinking about how we stay steady. I’m thinking about ballasts, the heavy things—weighty, substantive—employed in ships to lend balance. My ballast is my family, and I’m lucky enough to have a few. There’s the family of my blood, those mad geniuses who share my last name; the family of my friends, wild spirits exploring the limits of what’s possible; and, last but not least, the family I walked into when I came to Google.

This Pride, Google and Google’s LGBTQ+ community are celebrating families big and small, chosen or inherited, as part of #ThisIsFamily. We encourage you to post on social media about the people who make up your family (no matter how you define it) and to donate to nonprofits like PFLAG, It Gets Better and GLAAD. Google.org has pledged to match up to $100,000 in total in donations to these three organizations during the month of June.

That’s not the only way we’re celebrating Pride. In typical Google fashion, we’re helping you connect with the world around you (and having a bit of fun) across our products:

  • In Google Maps, this year's parade routes are paved with rainbows.
  • You'll find rainbow "easter eggs" scattered through Google Search and G Suite, and you can join the fun from your desktop by switching your Gmail to a Pride theme for the month of June.
  • Google Play Newsstand has a special feature page for Pride-related coverage.
  • On YouTube, we're celebrating the LGBTQ+ creators who are #ProudToCreate a better future with their imagination, creativity, talent, and truth through our YouTube Spotlight Channel, Twitter, and Instagram.
  • We continue to help businesses declare their establishments "LGBTQ+ Friendly" or "Transgender Safe Space" on their business listings in Google Maps and Google Search.
  • One year on from our initial donation to the LGBT Center of New York in collaboration with the National Parks Foundation, Google.org is contributing another $500,000 (for a total of $1.5 Million) to the Center to help with the digitization of LGBTQ+ history. The project is called Stonewall Forever, and we need your help to find, preserve, and share the untold stories of LGBTQ+ history.
  • Google Arts & Culture has a dedicated Pride collection celebrating LGBTQ+ history, with 20 exhibits and over 2,700 artifacts, part of which comes from the Stonewall Forever project. 

Ballasts, like families, help us stay steady amidst commotion. Paradoxically, maybe, these heavy things also lift us up.

Celebrating Pride, from our families to yours.

Source: Gmail Blog