photography
digitizing art
Jasper Johal brings over three decades of world class professional photography experience to deliver exceptionally accurate digitization of all your museum's works of art.
Artist: Paul Gauguin (b. 1848, Paris; d. 1903, Atuona, Marquesas Islands)
Title: Haere Mai (1891)
Medium: Oil on jute canvas (28 9/16 x 36 1/4 inches) (72.5 x 92 cm)
2D works of flat art, paperworks and fabrics
3D works of art, sculpture, installations, cultural and religious artifacts
Quality: High resolution, color accurate, high bit rate captures.
Lighting: Special lights for full spectrum color accuracy.
Distortion: Techniques for eliminating keystoning.
Size: From 5 inch figurines to wall sized paintings and tapestries.
Title: Figure of a Buddhist Patron
Gandharan art from Jalalabad, Afghanistan,
Date: Kushan period (4th century)
Medium: Stucco with traces of red pigment
Safety: Low luminance exposures to protect against photo damage.
Handling: Procedures for minimizing handling of artwork during shooting. Work with museum's professional handlers.
Image Processing: Procedures for maintaining color accuracy and detail in post processing.
Metadata: Add metadata to easily add images to DAM (Data Asset Management).
Artist: Mark Rothko
Title: Untitled (Red Black Orange and Pink on Yellow)
Year: 1954
Medium: Oil, egg, and glue on canvas
Dimensions: 230.4 x 139.4 cm (90.7 x 54.9 inches)
Gigapixel: Seamlessly stitch together multiple exposures to create gigapixel images.
Optimize: Process images for different end uses: web galleries, social media posts, print collateral for fund raising, and marketing.
Collections: Work with curators to digitize themed collections of art, based on artist, period, movement, or other criteria. Then turn them into web galleries with essays, PDF publications that scholars can download, and print publications.
“Orangerie” by British sculptor Sir Anthony Caro (1924–2013); Abstract construction made of painted steel (1969)
Kees van Dongen “The Corn Poppy” (c. 1919) Oil on canvas
Antonio Berni “Juanito va a la ciudad (Juanito Goes to the City)” (1963)
Pablo Picasso “Deux femmes devant une fenêtre [Two Women in Front of a Window]” (1927)
Pablo Picasso “Deux femmes devant une fenêtre [Two Women in Front of a Window]” (1927)
Mark Rothko “Untitled (Red, Black, Orange & Pink On Yellow)” (1954)
Vasily Kandinsky “Sketch 160A” (1912)
Vicente Juan Masip (Juan de Juanes) “Christ the Savior with the Eucharist” (c. 1545–1550)
Joshua H. Shaw “Virginia Landscape” (1835)
Dish (Stonepaste; polychrome painted under transparent glaze) Safavid Iran (c.1600)
Mughal Prince (Qajar Iran, late 18th–early 19th century) Oil on canvas
Sarpech (Turban Ornament), India (early 18th century), Gold, silver, diamonds, and enamel
Gold Necklace from Iran, early Islamic period (11th–12th century)
Priest’s Necklace from India, made from 22 karat gold sheet, silver, diamonds, rubies, pearls and rudraksha seeds (early 19th century)
Tent Hanging, India c. 17th–18th century, silk embroidery on red quilted cotton
Dainichi, Buddha of Infinite Illumination, Japan, late Heian period, 11CE, Japanese cypress with gold
Buddha, India, Pala dynasty, 10th–11th century, Bronze with silver inlay
Buddha calling earth to witness, India, Pala dynasty, 10th–11th century, Bronze with silver inlay
Seated Buddha, Tibet, 15th century, Gilt bronze with silver inlay
Lord Krishna playing a flute, India, 18th century, painted terracotta
Frida Kahlo “Dos Mujeres (Two Women)” (1928)
Marcos Raya “Frida the Last Portrait” 1985
Marcos Raya “Frida the Last Portrait” 1985
Jean Tinguely “Méta-matic No. 9” (1958)
Keith Sonnier “Neon Wrapping Incandescent” (1969)
Keith Sonnier “Neon Wrapping Incandescent” (1969)
Gyula Kosice, “Gota hidroespacial” (1965)
Gyula Kosice, “Gota hidroespacial” (1965)
Margarita Cabrera “Arbol de la Vida – John Deere Tractor Model #790” (2007)
Martine Bedin “Super Lamp” (Designed 1978, made c. 1981–88)
Tord Boontje “Bouquet Lamp” (designed 2014, manufactured 2014–2015)
Jean Tinguely “Moulin à prières (Prayer Wheel)” (1954)