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  2. Frequently asked questions - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/6002688

    Frequently asked questions. Who can use the Google Arts & Culture platform? The Google Arts & Culture platform is open to non-profit institutions, museums, galleries, and archives with copyright-free or copyright-cleared content that they would like to share. The platform is accessible by invitation only.

  3. Create an exhibit in the new Story Editor - Google Arts & Culture...

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/10460872

    When creating stories to host on Google Arts & Culture, we suggest starting stories with full screen or half screen components and keeping to the character limit of 280 characters per slide. It is the best experience for the user and increases the likelihood of your story being read in full. Immersive components look sharp across multiple devices.

  4. Set up your account - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/4365006

    If you have had prior communication with the Google Arts & Culture, your account setup may have been completed for you. If so, please proceed directly to the next step. Otherwise, the first time you sign in, you will need to configure some basic account settings. Collection name: Choose an appropriate title for your account; this can be changed ...

  5. About Google Arts & Culture

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/4395223

    Google Arts & Culture currently supports over 2,000 cultural institutions in over 80 countries, more than 200,000 high-resolution digital images of original artworks, 7 million archival artifacts, over 1,800 Street View museum captures, and more than 3,000 online exhibitions curated by experts. All of this exists together in a single unified ...

  6. Chrome extension - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/7672630

    Google Arts & Culture Platform. Chrome extension. The Google Arts & Culture Chrome extension generates an image from the Google Arts & Culture platform as a background image in Chrome. If you publish your assets with the Chrome extension option, users with the extension installed can discover your artwork when they open a new tab on their browser.

  7. Download your items and images - Google Arts & Culture Platform...

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/7497087

    Sign in to your account and navigate to the Items manager. To export metadata for individual items, choose the ones you would like to download by ticking the selection box next to the relevant images. Click the arrow next to Add new items and then choose Export metadata as CSV. A CSV file will be downloaded to your computer containing the ...

  8. Add items - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/4365018

    Upload content. In the Items manager, click the arrow next to Add new items select Simple import. C hoose from one of the following upload options: Upload: To upload one or more supported media files from your computer. Video search: Search YouTube for publicly available videos. YouTube Video: Enter the URL of a publicly available YouTube video.

  9. Embed Stories - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/10968067

    Enable the "Embed" publishing option. In the CMS, click on the "Stories" button to open the Story Editor. Click on the story you want to embed. On the story page, click on the settings icon. In the dialog that appears, check the "Allow story to be embedded" box.

  10. Supported media - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/6002820

    The Google Arts & Culture platform accepts a variety of media types. Use the table below as a guide to the accepted formats: Format. Requirements. Images. JPEG, PNG, single-image TIFF. 2500+ pixels on the shortest side of the image (4000+ pixels recommended) No more than 75 MiB or 100 megapixels. Less than 32768 pixels on the largest side of ...

  11. Large Scale Data Program - Google Arts & Culture Platform Help

    support.google.com/culturalinstitute/partners/answer/9584243

    The Large Scale Data Program is a bespoke technical service, tailored to your institution's needs, provided by Google Arts & Culture. This initiative is intended to help your institution share on the platform thousands of collection items online simply and rapidly. Examples include: The Met Museum. The Rijksmuseum.