“Vi sfidiamo a ricreare le opere d’arte con cose e persone che avete in casa. Scegliete la vostra opera preferita. Trovate tre oggetti sparsi per casa. Ricreatela“. Con questo tweet del 25 marzo, il Getty Museum di Los Angeles ha sollecitato milioni di follower a riprodurre un’opera d’arte tra le mura di casa e postarne la foto su twitter con l’hashtag #GettyMuseumChallenge.
We challenge you to recreate a work of art with objects (and people) in your home.
? Choose your favorite artwork
? Find three things lying around your house⠀
? Recreate the artwork with those itemsAnd share with us. pic.twitter.com/9BNq35HY2V
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 25, 2020
La sfida del museo americano è nata per intrattenere e coinvolgere gli appassionati d’arte di mezzo mondo costretti a casa dopo le misure estreme necessarie per arginare la diffusione del contagio da coronavirus.
Accolta con entusiasmo, la social challenge è diventata ben presto virale con centinaia dia immagini di utenti che hanno riprodotto le opere d’arte in modo geniale, bizzarro, esilarante, servendosi di capi d’abbigliamento, bottiglie, scatole, oggetti e accessori vari.
Ecco alcune delle tantissime immagini pubblicate su twitter dagli appassionati d’arte:
L’incubo di Fussli #gettymuseumchallenge @GettyMuseum pic.twitter.com/zXM7Sexhb5
— Basilico (@Basilic84117677) April 3, 2020
Museums Ask People To Recreate Famous Paintings With Anything They Can Find At Home, Get 35 Hilarious Pics #gettymuseumchallenge https://t.co/K3kL6fq4Zr
— Minayd (@minayd) March 30, 2020
“Self-portrait with monkeys” Frida Kahlo, 1943 #gettymuseumchallenge @GettyMuseum pic.twitter.com/fic3XvhyyV
— Shauna Barnes (@whatmommysaid) April 2, 2020
The Getty Museum challenge. The soul’s Prison House by Evelyn De Morgan. #gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/B0BXT21xw7
— Tynais (@Tynais1) April 2, 2020
Museum Asks People To Recreate Paintings With Stuff They Can Find at Home, Here Are The Results#gettymuseumchallengehttps://t.co/XD87y2qrH7
— Meredith Moore, Ed.D. (@blairsmithmoore) April 1, 2020
Picasso, “Head of a Woman (Dora Maar)” @GettyMuseum #gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/lUD6bpnW0o
— Luisa Perkins (@LuisaPe18293911) April 2, 2020
My dad as Rembrandt #gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/C94sMGZaRZ
— Yae Kokoriu (@KarinSchulzeB) April 3, 2020
Marilyn Monroe, 1967 (silkscreen print)
Andy Warhol
Photo by Robert Pareja#gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/DboCnl3C4f— ICONOPIXEL (@Iconopixel) April 1, 2020
#tussenkunstenquarantaine#gettymuseumchallenge
Art Lessons while homescooling pic.twitter.com/GBXFVMZ2Sx— Sandra N. (@SndrNkl) March 31, 2020
my take on Magritte#gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/OxgOxWion6
— Alex Hao (@alexhaobao) April 3, 2020
My 22 nd day in lockdown in Italy. Reflecting on the beauty of importance. Flowers then TP today. #sweetemmamorland #:1892 #millais #sirjohneverettmillais #everett #artforfun #preraphaelite #gettymuseumchallenge… pic.twitter.com/NnqlSM5b3Z
— Ethel Bustamante (@ethelbustamante) March 31, 2020
@GettyMuseum #gettymuseumchallenge #betweenartandquarantine Portrait of a Man (Self-Portrait) 1433, Jan van Eyck, The National Gallery, London pic.twitter.com/eBdDrbbtOG
— Kim Thomas (@SuzyMintz) March 31, 2020
Getty Museum challenge – ‘Lot and His Daughters’ by Orazio Gentileschi #gettymuseumchallenge pic.twitter.com/pGULnMMsiv
— Tanya Reeves (@mitchmilly) April 1, 2020
Next in the #gettychallenge #gettymuseumchallenge, recreating famous works of art with everyday household objects: Lady Lilith by Dante Gabriel Rosseti (I do not look like Fanny Cornforth) pic.twitter.com/PuLUdo8YRL
— Dr Sasha Garwood (@Skull_Beneath) April 3, 2020
Grazie a mio fratello che si è prestato!#gettymuseumchallenge #COVID19italia #autocertificazione pic.twitter.com/6WcgkwNVaD
— Alessio Roma (@alessioromagram) April 3, 2020
Madonna and child.https://t.co/ZbnVeToUPE pic.twitter.com/7Vkl91CF6D
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 25, 2020
The Virgin, Saint Elizabeth, and the Infants John the Baptist and Christ, but now with more unicorns…https://t.co/EUDgg7362Y pic.twitter.com/uSqoPFGF2d
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 26, 2020
We stan.https://t.co/K3JVGpFPAJ pic.twitter.com/rIqXzr5hIK
— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 25, 2020
Mondrian #Lego pic.twitter.com/lXdgWvZsK0
— Sally Bain (@sallywisebain) April 1, 2020
Getty Museum Challenge. #Covid_19 #QuarantineLife @GettyMuseum Title: Panel with Painted Image of Serapis
Artist/Maker: Unknown
Culture: Romano-Egyptian
Place: Egypt (Place Created)
Date: A.D. 100–200
Medium: Tempera on wood
Object Number: 74.AP.21 pic.twitter.com/OgkOZYvGVq— MushroomMatt (@MushroomTable) March 30, 2020
@GettyMuseum I present Portrait of Sylvia von Harden, by Otto Dix.
Can’t believe I just did that in these cold winds! pic.twitter.com/zLIybZDk9Q
— Nathan 🔶 🇪🇺 | 🐻⬇ (@thisisfisk) March 29, 2020
Thank you for the entertaining inspiration! Here’s our stay-at-home recreation inspired by the Double Portrait painted by Michael Sweerts 1660-62. pic.twitter.com/nhpFSLWT1x
— StranjahDanjah (@StranjahDanjah) April 1, 2020
The Nobleman with his Hand on his Chest vs. The Drunkman with his Bottle in his Pocket #elgreco pic.twitter.com/3w6lBmZXnS
— raul dumitrescu (@raulnecesar) March 30, 2020
Edward Burne-Jones, Temperantia pic.twitter.com/fXMrFIHvv5
— Suzanne King (@thesuzeum) April 1, 2020
🙏📖🦁
[Detail of St. Jerome from a ca. 1510 prayer book] https://t.co/eboGOprCDx pic.twitter.com/3Ag5juUCer
— Newberry Library (@NewberryLibrary) March 30, 2020
— Jeff Johnson (@jeff23jaj) March 28, 2020