The Met releases high-def 3D scans of 140 famous art objects

2026-03-1215:4332971www.openculture.com

We can go through most of our lives holding out hope of one day seeing in reality such works as van Gogh's Sunflowers, Monet's Haystacks, a clay tablet containing actual cuneiform writing with our own…

We can go through most of our lives hold­ing out hope of one day see­ing in real­i­ty such works as van Gogh’s Sun­flow­ersMon­et’s Haystacks, a clay tablet con­tain­ing actu­al cuneiform writ­ing with our own eyes, or the ancient Egypt­ian Tem­ple of Den­dur. We can actu­al­ly come face to face — or rather, face to sur­face — with all of them, tem­ple includ­ed, at New York’s Met­ro­pol­i­tan Muse­um of Art, which con­tains all those and more arti­facts of human civ­i­liza­tion than any of us could hope to exam­ine close­ly in a life­time. But even if we did, we might only feel tempt­ed to look at them more close­ly still, even to touch them. That may be an improb­a­ble hope, but we can at least get clos­er than ever now thanks to the Met’s new archive of high-def­i­n­i­tion 3D scans.

“View­ers can zoom in, rotate, and exam­ine each mod­el, bring­ing unprece­dent­ed access to sig­nif­i­cant works of art,” says the Met’s offi­cial announce­ment. “The 3D mod­els can also be explored in view­ers’ own spaces through aug­ment­ed real­i­ty (AR) on most smart­phone and VR head­sets, as a resource for research, explo­ration, and curios­i­ty.”

High­lights include “a mar­ble sar­coph­a­gus with lions felling ante­lope (3rd cen­tu­ry); a stat­ue of Horus as a fal­con pro­tect­ing King Nectanebo II (360–343 BCE); Kano Sansetsu’s Old Plum (1646); and a house mod­el by Nayarit artist(s) (200 BCE–300 CE).” Or per­haps you’d pre­fer an inti­mate view of an eigh­teenth-cen­tu­ry tile depic­tion of Mec­ca, a nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry mar­ble sculp­ture of Perseus with the head of Medusa, or a suit of armor belong­ing to King Hen­ry II of France?

Brows­ing this archive of more than 100 dig­i­tized his­tor­i­cal objects, you’ll also notice pieces from Japan like sev­en­teenth-cen­tu­ry screens by the artists Kano Sanset­su and Suzu­ki Kiit­su. These must have been pri­or­i­ties for the Met’s insti­tu­tion­al part­ner in this project, the Japan­ese tele­vi­sion net­work NHK. It all came about “as part of the pub­lic broadcaster’s ini­tia­tive to pro­duce ultra-high def­i­n­i­tion 3D com­put­er graph­ics of nation­al trea­sures and oth­er impor­tant art­works,” with “fur­ther edu­ca­tion­al pro­gram­ming and poten­tial con­tent using these cut­ting-edge, best-in-class mod­els” in the off­ing. For now, though, the archive offers us more than enough to behold from any pos­si­ble angle. To do so, just click the “View in 3D” but­ton below the image on the page of your arti­fact or art­work of choice. It may not be the same as hold­ing the object in your hands, but it’s as close as you’re going to get — unless, of course, you find your­self inspired to pur­sue the dream of becom­ing a cura­tor at the Met.

via Colos­sal

Relat­ed con­tent:

Take a New Vir­tu­al Real­i­ty Tour of the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Muse­um of Art

See Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Ear­ring in 3D in a New 108-Gigapix­el Scan

3D Scans of 7,500 Famous Sculp­tures, Stat­ues & Art­works: Down­load & 3D Print Rodin’s Thinker, Michelangelo’s David & More

Explore Metic­u­lous 3D Mod­els of Endan­gered His­tor­i­cal Sites in Google’s “Open Her­itage” Project

Open­Ver­te­brate Presents a Mas­sive Data­base of 13,000 3D Scans of Ver­te­brate Spec­i­mens

The Earth Archive Will 3D-Scan the Entire World & Cre­ate an “Open-Source” Record of Our Plan­et

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.



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Comments

  • By callumprentice 2026-03-1217:581 reply

    Trivial to see the raw GLB files in a Viewer that gives you a bit more control.

    https://github.khronos.org/glTF-Sample-Viewer-Release/?model...

    • By RobotToaster 2026-03-1310:391 reply

      The way most museum 3d viewers don't provide a download button always seemed a little odd to me.

      • By Geonode 2026-03-1315:031 reply

        Trying to capitalize on merchandising, even though it's all public domain.

        • By dagmx 2026-03-1315:481 reply

          That’s a really unfavourable view for what is a likely an oversight in UI design.

          • By Geonode 2026-03-1318:561 reply

            It's well established. Most public websites for museums have galleries of high res scans, and they're mostly all trying to keep you from downloading it. There are lots of tools out there to circumvent them, however.

            • By dagmx 2026-03-1319:241 reply

              This is a tautology and one at odds with itself. They simultaneously provide the high res scans but you think there’s a conspiracy to keep you from them. Why provide them in the first place then?

  • By IAmNotACellist 2026-03-1218:342 reply

    Here's a little script to download all the publicly available scans (135) as GLBs and stick the metadata in a JSON. The scans are all CC0 (public domain)

    https://github.com/InconsolableCellist/met_scans

    • By thot_experiment 2026-03-131:062 reply

      anyone wanna throw up a magnet link for this so we don't hammer their website unnecessarily?

      • By petcat 2026-03-1310:59

        maybe you could throw up a magnet link

      • By reverius42 2026-03-131:291 reply

        It's only a few hundred MB, and hopefully they're using a CDN.

        • By dyauspitr 2026-03-138:511 reply

          For someone that doesn’t know about this, how does a CDN help? Don’t they still have to pay for all the data downloaded even if it’s hosted on a CDN. I thought the whole purpose of a CDN was just to make access quicker and had nothing to do with saving on bandwidth costs.

          • By petcat 2026-03-1310:58

            > hammer their website unnecessarily

            This is what a CDN will prevent

    • By reverius42 2026-03-131:29

      Thank you! Going to try to 3d print some of these and see how they come out.

  • By Stevvo 2026-03-1217:143 reply

    The original article is https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/03/metropolitan-museum-o... Not sure why that is not linked, instead we have an AI generated SEO spam page.

    • By roughly 2026-03-130:56

      OpenCulture's been around for a long time and has been a pretty good aggregator for interesting things in art and culture.

    • By corndoge 2026-03-130:07

      You have no basis to claim that this is AI generated content

    • By PaulHoule 2026-03-1218:37

      For what it's worth I thought the modal dialog on the original was worse than the pop-over ad on the copy.

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