News & trends

Between Art and Quarantine

Image above: “Self-portrait” by Van Gogh
Elena Kazanina via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

As people around the world stay inside to contain the spread of coronavirus, they are having to come up with creative ways to remain sane (and entertained). This has led to the latest international internet craze: recreating works of art with household objects. The Getty Museum, Metropolitan Museum, Rijksmuseum, and Hermitage museum challenged their followers to recreate famous works from their collections. The challenge was inspired by an Instagram account from Amsterdam, @tussenkunstenquarantaine  – which translates as “between art and quarantine” from Dutch. 

While museums remain closed to the public, institutions are keen to keep the art-loving community engaged during this difficult time. Challenging people to create their favorite works of art with objects at home is the perfect way to do this and museums have reposted some of the community’s best variations. 

This is what museums asked of their audiences:

1) Choose your favourite painting

2) Find whatever relevant things may be lying around your house,

3) Recreate the painting with said attributes.

The Getty Museum posted the challenge via the museum’s Twitter page, urging people to get creative during their time of self-isolation. The museum’s social media lead, Sarah Waldorf, mentioned that the museum’s direct messages have been “flooded” ever since. Annelisa Stephan, assistant director of digital and user experience design, says that the museum’s “vision is to use digital to uplift, to inspire, and to create community through art”.

Russians, too, have embraced this theme in the Facebook group Izo-Izolyatsya (or, in English, Art Studio Isolation) with great flair. This challenge serves as evidence that creativity does indeed flourish under constraints.

 

Jacob Cornelis van Ostsanen Tribule,
Andrey Litvinov via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

Raphael “Sistine Madonna”,
Artem Nikolaev via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

Nicholas Roerich “Remember”
Ilona Mazzei via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

Jerome Bosch, “The Last Judgment”, fragment Grily with a sword
Oleg Smirnov via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

“Self portrait” by Van Gogh
Elena Kazanina via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

“Portrait of Senora Sabasa Garcia”, Franciso Goya
Posted by Tanya Titova via Facebook (Izo-Izolyatsya)

 

Image from the FB page of Rijksmuseum

 

Image from the FB page of Rijksmuseum

 

Image from the FB page of Rijksmuseum

.ART Team

Recent Posts

Costume as Language: Venera Kazarova on the Art of Transformation

Venera Kazarova (www.venerakazarova.art) is a contemporary artist whose practice merges costume design, performance, and visual…

20 hours ago

TOP 5 PAVILIONS at the Venice Biennale of Architecture

As the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia unfolded under the curatorial…

7 days ago

AI, Web3, and Vitiligo Representation: Wildy Martinez Does it All

Wildy Martinez (wildflowerfields.art) is a a professionally trained designer and independent artist, blending together her…

2 weeks ago

Residencies as Climate Actors – NAARCA.ART

In the face of accelerating climate breakdown, artist residencies are emerging as critical sites for…

2 weeks ago

.ART Turns 8!

8 Years, 300,000 Creatives, and 8 Artists and Institutions Who Inspire Us This week, we’re…

4 weeks ago

In Their Words

This article appeared in the May/June 2025 issue of Museum and reprinted with permission by…

4 weeks ago