The Google Cultural Institute and the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo in Bogota (MAC) joined to present a new proposal by the Google Art Project in which works of art can be virtually observed with an unprecedented level of detail. Now all museum visitors can physically (with the QR code) and virtually access, through mobile or technological devices, 50 works from the MAC's permanent collection and admire them through high resolution gigapixel images. This type of technology, called Art Camera, is a photographic process that allows the preproduction of images at the highest possible resolution, with a level of detail that goes beyond what the human eye can capture. Some of the available works from the collection include: Formas para Copiar la Luna (Ways to Copy the Moon) by David Manzur; Cruxifixión Nuclear (Nuclear Crucifixion) by Carlos Correa; Los Bañistas (The Bathers) by Luis Caballero; Formas Superpuestas (Superimposed Forms) by Manuel Hernández; Mutantes (Mutants) by Carlos Rojas; Natividad (Nativity) by Nadín Ospina; and Supermercado de la Séptima (Supermarket of La Séptima) by Santiago Cárdenas, among others. The works are on display at: https://goo.gl/s739Fg. Viewers can also visit the three floors and sculptural space of the MAC via a 3D tour powered with Street View technology; get close to interesting works and click on video and audio materials that complement the experience, all this with the single push of a button at https://goo.gl/Stc45l The equipment used for these images allows for a 360° view of the interior spaces that are eventually assembled to permit a smooth navigation. According to Susana Pabón, communications director of Google in Colombia, "Being able to offer art to internet users throughout the world is an essential part of our vision to democratize information and to make it accessible to everyone. Today, we join the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo. We congratulate this institution as we are proud to partner with them in pioneering the use of technologies that offer access to artworks with such a great degree of detail and quality that is not available anywhere else."