Google Arts & Culture Cheats

Google Arts & Culture Hack 10.3.2 + Redeem Codes

See artworks, museums and more

Developer: Google LLC
Category: Education
Price: Free
Version: 10.3.2
ID: com.google.Stella

Screenshots

Game screenshot Google Arts & Culture mod apkGame screenshot Google Arts & Culture apkGame screenshot Google Arts & Culture hack

Description

Are you curious about what Van Gogh’s Starry Night looks like up close? Have you ever toured the ancient Maya temples or met the inspirational figures of Black history? Do you want to learn about Japan’s unique food culture or incredible Indian railways?


Google Arts & Culture puts the treasures, stories and knowledge of over 2,000 cultural institutions from 80 countries at your fingertips. From the suffragettes who fought for women’s rights, to performing arts at the Paris Opera, to NASA’s archive of stunning images, discover stories about our cultural heritage. It’s your doorway to explore the art, history, people and wonders of our world.

Highlights:
• Art Transfer – Take a photo and transform it with classic artworks
• Art Selfie – Discover portraits that look like you
• Color Palette – Find art by using the colors of your photo
• Art Projector – See how artworks look in real size
• Pocket Gallery – Wander through immersive galleries and get up close to art
• Art Camera – Explore high-definition artworks
• 360° videos – Experience culture in 360 degrees
• Virtual reality tours – Step inside world-class museums
• Street View – Tour famous sites and landmarks
• Explore by time and color – Travel through time and see the rainbow through art
• Art Recogniser – Point your device camera at artworks to learn more about them, even when offline (at select museums only)

More features:
• Exhibits – Take guided tours curated by experts
• Favorites – Save and group your favorite artworks into galleries to share with friends or students
• Nearby – Find museums and exhibitions near you
• Notifications – Subscribe to receive weekly highlights or favorite content updates
• Translate – Use the translate button to read about exhibits from around the world in your language

Permissions notice:
• Location: used to recommend cultural sites and events based on your current location
• Camera: used to recognize artworks and provide related information about them

Version history

10.3.2
2023-10-24
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
10.0.12
2023-08-23
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
10.0.11
2023-08-23
• We’ve consolidated our navigation bar into three items - Explore, Play and Inspire.
• Design improvements to the Inspire feed make it easier to like, share and find related content.
• Find our Camera features and other cultural playables in the re-designed Play tab.
• Use the new Explore tab to browse our partners’ wide corpus of cultural content through topics such as Fashion, Food, and Visual arts.
9.2.37
2023-02-22
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.2.34
2023-01-17
• We've given our icon a fresh new design.
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.2.33
2023-01-12
• We've given our icon a fresh new design.
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.1.48
2022-12-07
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.1.41
2022-10-25
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.1.39
2022-08-02
• Bring artworks to your homescreen with the new Artist of the Day widget. See a new artwork every morning, from an artist born on this day.
9.0.47
2022-06-17
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.46
2022-05-17
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.44
2022-04-26
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.43
2022-04-04
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.42
2022-03-23
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.41
2022-02-28
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
9.0.38
2021-11-13
• Does your pets photo belong in a museum? With Pet Portraits, compare your pet photo to artworks from museums around the world
• We also have a brand-new immersive look and feel for the Camera menu
9.0.37
2021-11-11
• Does your pets photo belong in a museum? With Pet Portraits, compare your pet photo to artworks from museums around the world
• We also have a brand-new immersive look and feel for the Camera menu
9.0.29
2021-11-08
• Does your pets photo belong in a museum? With Pet Portraits, compare your pet photo to artworks from museums around the world
• We also have a brand-new immersive look and feel for the Camera menu
8.3.16
2021-08-23
• Bug fixes and minor improvements.
8.3.12
2021-06-02
• New style sets in Art Transfer to transform your photos using iconic artworks, from contemporary art to classic portraits
• Unlock badge achievements by exploring interactive camera features
8.1.19
2021-04-09
Travel the globe with 3 new Pocket Gallery virtual exhibitions. Tap the camera button to get started.
• Brushes with the World: The first Pocket Gallery with guided audio narration, taking you around the world through art and sound
• Better Together: Explore social gatherings in art through works by Renoir, Manet, Rousseau, and more from the Getty’s collection
• From Africa to Japan: Contemporary Japanese and African artworks from the Jean Pigozzi Collection
8.0.54
2020-12-07
Bug fixes and minor improvements.
8.0.46
2020-10-23
• Art Filter — The most famous pearl earring, a Samurai helmet, an iconic Van Gogh self-portrait and more: try on new filters based on artifacts from museums by tapping the camera icon.
8.0.45
2020-10-20
• Art Filter — The most famous pearl earring, a Samurai helmet, an iconic Van Gogh self-portrait and more: try on new filters based on artifacts from museums by tapping the camera icon.
8.0.35
2020-10-06
• Art Filter — The most famous pearl earring, a Samurai helmet, an iconic Van Gogh self-portrait and more: try on new filters based on artifacts from museums by tapping the camera icon.

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Ratings

4.7 out of 5
133.8K Ratings

Reviews

D. Hill,
Google Arts and Culture
The Google Arts and Culture application is the type of application people who are curious about the cultures of the world dream of. To start off the design is in balance with a clear color background and minimal text regarding categories and article titles. Users can easily navigate the main sections of the app from the bottom tab. The app can also be used in various ways whether consuming information from the content provided which ranges from classical artworks articles on historical figures, science as well as a range of other topics. The app can be used to create content by way of galleries the user constructs. The app can even be seen as a observational lens through use of Virtual Reality and Selfies. A short review can’t do this application justice. It is well worth a download just for the ability to enrich your imagination.
shumblebird,
Best app in existence
I was stunned by the vastness of this app —it could be called Humanity or the World. It’s certainly not limited to art. You can go on 3D virtual visits not just to every museum in existence but to important sites- Machu Piccu, Barcelona, Stonehenge, you get the drift. For a history & archaeology buff, it is tops. You can spend hours wandering around in here . There’s fun stuff too - it will find artworks with people that resemble you or give you artworks with your favorite color predominent. Even if math is your thing, there’s plenty to keep you busy. Learn about perspective in innovative ways. See similarities in artworks and crafts from disparate cultures, sometimes hundreds of years apart-and don’t forget symbols. Maybe the meaning of mankind is in here somewhere. This is Google at it’s absolute best.
jolinskyparadise,
Selfie option DOES work!
I'm not sure why people are writing reviews, saying that the selfie option doesn't work, because it worked perfectly fine for me. It took me two seconds to scroll down the home page, find the selfie option, read about how it is new and experimental, take a selfie, and find pieces that resembled me. Maybe it only works on certain devices, but as the owner of an iPhone 6, I assure you, the selfie option works phenomenally. Also, there are countless informational texts and articles regarding art(ists). This app is amazing and I 10/10 recommend!
Hitman4832,
Works janky
This is a hit or miss. Sometimes there is a back button at the top left corner to return to the previous page. Sometimes not. I can’t tell you the amount of times I had to turn to the main page of this app to re-search the location I was just in. For example; explore by places. Click on a location from the list. Now try to go back. Yep no back button so you have to go back to Home again, click Places, sort by alphabetical...again and scroll ..again. Cmon this is 2021 Some galleries also don’t allow you to zoom in on the artwork. This is especially stupid if the artwork is what looks like to be the size of my iPhone....on my 12.9’ iPad Pro. I did not buy this giant iPad to view small pictures that don’t allow me to zoom in.
dyllisphiller,
Slow and lacking, but has hidden potential
Unfortunately, even on new devices, the app is slow. It has the hallmarks of being a Web site inside an app wrapper: slow on current devices, poor navigation, and frustrating inconsistencies.

It's difficult to skim articles or to share specific sections of long articles because they are presented as slides rather than pages. Artifact pages don't link directly to the articles that have context about them, nor do they have that context in the artifact's description.

It seems to lack works from artists within the last century. Google has plenty of money to license these works if need be, assuming it does not fall under fair use in the first place. Some art from important figures is absent, including, e.g., many of Robert Mapplethorpe's works.

There doesn't seem to be a way to suggest art to add to the collection. There doesn't seem to be a way for artists to contribute their work, either.

There is much potential here if Google would make a native application using the look and feel of iOS (rather than shoehorning their own UI language onto it) and vastly increase the size of their collection.
kimo ki,
A very odd experience for an iPad Pro user
Nothing is wrong with the content itself; but I haven’t even been using the app for more than ten minutes and I would say the overall usability is… strange.

For one, there’s no ‘dark’ mode. I study art even while I’m in bed, which makes it important for me to be able to use dark mode as a way to avoid the extra eye strain.

Secondly, there’s no way for me to go back to the homepage! I don’t know if this experience is exclusive to the iPad; but you would think that having a back button would be the norm for all apps - especially those produced by one of the largest companies on the internet. When I enter my settings, I don’t see any way to access the homepage. There is no quick access menu anywhere onscreen. Swiping anywhere across the screen to switch back also does not work. I would have to go back to the main page by exiting the app and forcing it to close.

I highly recommend the app for the art itself, but the UX needs work. If the app missed having these two basic functions (which could be noticed in minutes) i don’t doubt that the issues stop there.
Kerrynet32,
Needs a lot of work
Excellent app in theory however the programming needs a lot of work. Very poor in app functionality such as moving smoothly between images and back to previous menu pages, landscape view is off, when zooming into images you are then unable to continue scrolling to next image without first returning to previous page. Also, many artist pieces are missing. I scrolled through all of the Surrealism pieces looking for Salvador Dali and did not find a single piece by him. Then when I go to Dali’s page on your app, there are barely any of most famous pieces. That is the case for many artists offered on this app. Another example would be Hieronymous Bosch. If these things were all corrected, you would have an excellent app and I will happily change my rating.
mlchicago1871,
Location Restriction
Echoing what many have said about the location restriction on the selfie feature. I can understand Google didn’t expect the selfie feature to go viral and were thus unprepared. However, the limited access was not clearly communicated and the fact that it seems the coastal cities got access and middle America did not seems misguided. Overall, like the way the app allows you to interact with art and exposes you to art you’re not familiar with. The UI and overall experience seems on par with Google’s other great products. One last point of feedback would be to incorporate even smaller art institutions. I live in Chicago and the many diverse art institutions of the city are not well represented.
Reflect101,
A great potential unrealized
So broad and comprehensive it is unusable; you might as well use the internet. If you want specificity, like favorite paintings by favorite artists, Pinterest is more functional. The only competitive advantage this has is geographic locations. Let’s say I want to revisit the Louvre, well this works well for museum tours. Hundreds of thousands of items and articles presumes you have infinite time and no plan. If you like to meander endlessly without goal or outcome, other than killing time, than this is for you. If you want to create order and structure out of your artistic preferences and explore undiscovered items similar to what you love, skip this app. I am going to give it another week and then either delete it or revise the review. Let’s see.
thechris623,
Legal Fail. Is Google becoming big brother?
Google needs to own up to what they’re doing with biometric face scans, and either address the issue with Texas residents or remove the feature altogether. Banning an entire state from using the features on their app is exclusionist, and I doubt if Google’s intentions were pure that they would refrain from simply including a legal notice for Texas residents (based on state laws, TX residents have the right to know what biometric face scans are used for; Google refuses to comply with this, and instead they just opted out entire LARGE state out of this app’s premier feature.)

I’ve never been disappointed in a Google product—until now (okay, Google+ sucked too). I’m considering trading in my Google Home for an Apple Speaker, if Google doesn’t improve transparency with its users. This is absurd.