Getty Voices: The Power of Vermeer
Vermeer's newly arrived Woman in Blue Reading a Letter seems calmly at home in our galleries—but introduces a distinctive new presence.
Read MoreVermeer's newly arrived Woman in Blue Reading a Letter seems calmly at home in our galleries—but introduces a distinctive new presence.
Read MoreIt could happen to you: comic mix-ups, near-death encounters, and other tales of accursed romance from French prints at the Getty Research Institute.
Read More"A feeling of surprise, even disbelief, that someone so unique could have remained unknown to us for so long."
Read MoreWhat do you think the first line of this letter might say? Share your ideas.
Read More“I imagine the people in Metzker’s photographs as supporting characters in a film noir—captured on an average day, precisely at the loneliest moment before the cruel twist of fate takes hold.”
Read MoreThis morning we launched Getty Voices, a new social media project on The Iris led by a different member of the Getty community every week.
Read MoreThe new series Getty Voices kicks off with a behind-the-scenes view of a field project in Peru.
Read MoreWhy the manuscript illuminations in Florence at the Dawn of the Renaissance really rock.
Read MoreNotes and video excerpts from the Getty’s participation in the World Economic Forum.
Read MoreThe Robert Mapplethorpe archive is now available at the Getty Research Institute.
Read MoreFeaturing over 2,000 newly digitized catalogs, a new database will revolutionize Nazi-era art research.
Read MoreThese amazingly detailed prints depict the successful military campaign of the Qianlong Emperor against Nepalese warriors.
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