The British Museum Has Put 300,000 Images of Its Most Famous Artworks Online

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There are now nearly 4.5 million objects in its digital archive, and 1.9 million photographs.

With much of world on lockdown, now’s a good time to get around to tasks you’ve long putting off. For London’s British Museum, that includes adding objects and images to its online collections database. To date, it has digitized nearly 4.5 million objects, or about half of its encyclopedic collection.

The new update includes close to 300,000 new photographs, for a total of 1.9 million images, all of which are free to download and use for non-commercial purposes under a Creative Commons license. And for the first time, the online catalogue, launched in 2007, is accessible on mobile phones and tablets.

The museum has also added high-resolution photographs of objects like the famed Rosetta Stone that are invisible to the human eye, even if you were to be at the museum.

“We are delighted to be able to unveil this major revamp early, and hope that these important objects can provide inspiration, reflection, or even just quiet moments of distraction during this difficult time,” Hartwig Fischer, director of the museum, said in a statement.

New additions to the digital collection include the Easter Island sculpture Hoa Hakananai’a, a 1,600-year-old Chinese Admonitions Scroll, and painter Dante Gabriel Rossett`s The Death of Breuze Sans Pitié, which was acquired in September.

The museum is also touting new online catalogue entries for 73 Damien Hirst drawings (collectively titled “Portraits of Frank, The Wolseley Drawings”), in which the artist sketched his business manager on placemats during their regular breakfast meetings between 2004 and 2010. Unfortunately, however, no images of the works are available.

Nevertheless, the additions to the online catalogue are sure to boost the British Museum’s online traffic, which is already up 120 percent compared to this time last year, according to the museum.

However, the process has not been without its gaffes, reports the BBC. In cataloguing its holdings of Turkish postcards, the museum mistook a copyright notice—”Her Hakki Mahfuzdur,” which means “all rights reserved”—for the name of a stationary company. The institution claimed the postcards were from “Turkey’s largest producer of postcards” until an eagle-eyed Turkish diplomat identified the error on Twitter.

“Whoops!” the British Museum replied. “Thanks for pointing this out.”

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