Image courtesy Museo del Prado
At the Museo del Prado in Madrid, a new exhibition allows viewers to do more than just observe classic works of art: for the first time, they can reach out and feel the paintings. Called Touching the Prado, the initiative was built around the idea of creating an experience for visually impaired visitors. “This project allows for the reality of the painting to be perceived in order to mentally recreate it as a whole and thus provide an emotional perception of the work," the museum explains on their site.To create the touchable works, Museo del Prado worked with creative studio Estudios Durero, who used a special technique they invented called “Didú,” a way of relief printing that translates digital images into textural pieces that can be touched. For the Prado exhibit, they recreated six works, including The Gioconda (The Mona Lisa), Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan by Velázquez, The Nobleman with his Hand on his Chest by El Greco and The Parasol by Goya.“On this journey we have learned how important detail, volumes, textures, shapes are in composing a face, a mountain, a flower, a chair,” explains Ruben, a blind consultant on the project in the short documentary below.Touching the Prado. Didú from Estudios Durero on Vimeo..Touching the Prado will be on view until June 28, 2015.Related:Urban Typography Transforms Texts into 3D SkylinesScore Study II Is A Generative Braille-Notated Sound ArtworkWearable Experiments Humanize Tech Through Touch
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