How to Explore Art While the Getty Galleries Are Closed

We put together a starter kit of Getty’s online art, books, and videos

Painting of a woman in a shimmering blue cloak, turned toward the viewer and holding a palette, brushes, and a small marble or plaster sculpture

An Allegory of Painting, 1661, Frans van Mieris the Elder. Oil on copper, 5 × 3 1/2 in. Getty Museum, 82.PC.136

By Caitlin Shamberg

Mar 16, 2020

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The Getty Center, Getty Villa, and Getty Library are temporarily closed to help protect our community from the spread of coronavirus—but many of our resources are online, so there’s a lot to explore on a virtual visit.

We’ve rounded up art books, online exhibitions, podcasts, and videos to help you keep your artistic spirits up. Whether you’re looking to delve into art history, read up on alchemy, or listen to modern artists discuss their craft, here’s a guide to get you started.

Join Virtual Events

Learn more about artworks and art history or enjoy a virtual theater presentation from home. Find more about what's coming and how to RSVP here.

Explore Current Exhibitions

Many of you told us that you were planning on coming to the Getty Center or Getty Villa to see the latest exhibitions—so if the museum is your happy place, here are ways to experience three of our most popular current exhibitions, all online.

Michelangelo: Mind of the Master

Drawing and sketch of two figures, one bending over with a hoe and one sit/leaning against a stair or wall

Standing Man; Woman Hoeing, 1517–23, Michelangelo Buonarroti. Pen and brown ink, black chalk, over extensive preparatory work with the stylus, 8 1/4 × 9 3/16 in. Teylers Museum, Haarlem, purchased in 1790. © Teylers Museum, Haarlem

Michelangelo’s creations have become icons of world culture: the monumental marble David in Florence; the astonishing frescoes in the Sistine Chapel and the soaring dome of Saint Peter’s Basilica, both in Rome.

Drawing was key to Michelangelo’s practice. The exhibition Michelangelo: Mind of the Master highlights a selection of his rare preparatory drawings, from compositional sketches to detailed figure studies.

You can browse an overview of his work here, and explore many of the drawings online with our free audio tour here.

Assyria: Palace Art of Ancient Iraq

Assyrian kings in the ninth to seventh centuries BC decorated their palaces with masterful relief sculptures filled with vivid depictions of warfare, rituals, mythology, hunting, and court life.

Learn more about these reliefs here, and explore the different ways they were created—some using techniques familiar from comic books—in a blog post by one of the exhibition curators here.

Käthe Kollwitz: Prints, Process, Politics

Though not a household name in the U.S., Käthe Kollwitz was one of the foremost graphic artists of the 20th century. This exhibition sheds light on her creative process and presents her searing portrayals of the hardships of war, poverty, and injustice. See highlights of the exhibition, delve into her printmaking techniques, and explore how her images were used for social campaigns.

Delve into Art History Online

Bauhaus: Building the New Artist

Founded 100 years ago, the German school known as the Bauhaus changed not only art and design, but also how both were taught. Explore the Bauhaus’s legacy in our online exhibition here.

circles and shapes

Light-dark contrast study for Johannes Itten’s Preliminary Course, 1919, Friedl Dicker. Charcoal and pastel collage on black paper, 32.5 x 22.5 cm. Bauhaus Drawings and Prints by Friedl Dicker. The Getty Research Institute, 920030

The Legacy of Ancient Palmyra

Positioned at a crossroads, Palmyra in Syria was a nexus of ideas and innovations streaming from east and west that made it one of the most cosmopolitan centers in antiquity. Explore ancient Palmyra through rare 18th-century engravings and 19th-century photos of the ancient city, accompanied by essays from curators.

Photograph of ancient ruins with columns.

Temple of Bel complex, Palmyra, Syria (no. 65), Louis Vignes. Louis Vignes photographs of Palmyra & Beirut, Getty Research Institute, 2015.M.15

Art and Research Collections in a Click

Interested in old master painting? If you want to see all the Rembrandt paintings in LA museums right from your phone, there’s a website for that!

And how about browsing objects from the Getty collections with intriguing stories? Explore art at our new highlights page here and delve into our vast library collections, including thousands of digitized items, in our always-on library catalog here.

Read Art Books or Do Research

Cezanne watercolor of a blue teapot, two other pots, and some oranges on a table next to a chair

Still Life with Blue Pot, about 1900–06, Paul Cézanne. Watercolor over graphite, 18 15/16 × 24 7/8 in. The J. Paul Getty Museum, 83.GC.221

Getty Publications has over 350 books that can be downloaded and read at home through its virtual library, like this one on Cezanne’s watercolors. We particularly like this book about British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, who started taking pictures when she was 48.

If you need access to books about art history and visual culture—over 165,000 of them, dating back to the Renaissance and drawn from libraries around the world—you can search digitized books online here. Many of the Getty Library’s rare books have been digitized and are accessible online; highlights included nearly 200 titles on alchemy, and dozens of examples of some of the earliest photo books ever printed.

For research, Getty also offers many free databases for art history, conservation, provenance, and more; browse our resources page to see the full list.

Listen to Art Podcasts

Getty produces two podcasts. Go deep into Titian, Manet, and more with Art & Ideas, or hear from groundbreaking women artists like Betye Saar and Yoko Ono in Recording Artists: Radical Women.

You can also find audio tours with images from past exhibitions: explore Egypt and the Classical world, the strange creatures of the medieval bestiary, or the depiction of the nude in Renaissance art.

Watch Art-Making and Hundreds of Art History Talks

On our YouTube channels, you can learn about art history, discover classic art-making techniques, and watch hundreds of talks, too.

Find out how an illuminated manuscript was made, how a tapestry was woven, or even how an ancient Egyptian was mummified—or go outside and draw with charcoal.

Ever wondered what it’s like to restore a huge ancient sculpture? Watch the conservation process here.

Teaching kids or adults? We also offer videos on teaching with art and many video captures of past general-interest talks and scholarly presentations on art and history.

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