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Art comes home: Samsung and The Met Join Forces to Transform Your TV into a Museum

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Samsung and The Met (The Metropolitan Museum of Art) collaborate to bring some of the Museum’s most treasured works of art Samsung Smart TVs as digital art. Following the partnership, Samsung Art Store is unveiling a selection of iconic artworks in collaboration with The Met.

According to the info, Samsung Art Store users can choose from 38 pieces across a wide range of The Met’s storied curatorial departments, including the American Wing, Asian Art, Egyptian Art, European Paintings, Islamic Art, and more.

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The selected works were chosen by Samsung Art Store Curator Daria Greene. The offering features high-resolution digital reproductions of renowned artworks across a variety of cultures and time periods. Select works are currently on view at The Met in New York City.

Samsung Art Store users can display beloved works of art in their homes, including Edgar Degas’ The Rehearsal of the Ballet Onstage (ca. 1874); Vincent Van Gogh’s Sunflowers (1887); Paul Cézanne’s Still Life with Apples and Pot of Primroses (ca. 1890); and Georges Seurat’s Circus Sideshow (Parade du Cirque) (1887–88).

In addition, Samsung The Frame owners can also display ancient artifacts such as an Egyptian wedjat eye amulet (ca. 1070–664 B.C.), and medieval treasures including The Unicorn Rests in a Garden (1495–1505), the famed French and South Netherlandish textile from the Unicorn Tapestries.

Celebrated Japanese artworks such as Katsushika Hokusai’s Under the Mannen Bridge at Fukagawa (ca. 1830–32) as well as Utagawa Kuniyoshi’s Concise Illustrated Biography of Monk Nichiren: Calming the Stormy Sea at Tsunoda in Exile to Sado Island (1835–36) can also be displayed on The Frame

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