
DIGITAL
ACTIVOS MUSEUM ARQUEOLOGÍA.
MUSEO VIRTUAL
"ARKEOTIK VITORIA-GASTEIZ".
ACTIVOS
MUSEUM DIGITAL.
"ARKEOTIK
VITORIA-GASTEIZ" MUSEO VIRTUAL.
Granite head of Amenemhat III
by The British Museum.
From
the Temple of Bastet, Bubastis, Egypt 12th Dynasty, around 1800 BC.
From a colossal statue in a temple.
Scan
by Thomas Flynn using a Sony DSC HX5 and 123D Catch.
Dama de Elche
by arqus3d
on Sketchfab.
Triangles: 602.7k
Vertices: 302.2k
License:
CC Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike Creative
Commons.
Nefertiti's bust (like in the
museum)
by C. Yamahata
on Sketchfab.
Triangles: 100k
Vertices: 50k
Texture mapping on the clandestinely scanned bust.
The texture was retrieved from my previous photogrammetry model, while the 3D object was downloaded from Ad&D 4D‘ Sketchfab model.
The combination of these two models was completed with MeshLab, using the very efficient “Point Based Gluing” alignment method.
Finalization with realistic lightings performed in Sketchfab.
License:
CC Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike Creative
Commons.
A bust of Gaius Caesar
by The British Museum
on Sketchfab.
Triangles: 117.6k
Vertices: 58.8k
A Roman marble portrait head of Gaius Caesar, Augustus’ grandson. Dating to circa 2 BC - AD 4. Height: 35.56 centimetres
Gaius Caesar was the eldest son of Julia (Augustus’ daughter) and his deputy Agrippa. He died whilst on campaign in Parthia.
On display: G70
British Museum COL: http://bit.ly/gaiusCaesarBM 1870,0705.1
A photoscan model by Daniel Pett with a Canon DSLR.
License:
CC Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike Creative
Commons.
Bust of Antinous
by Matthew Brennan
on Sketchfab.
Triangles: 56.3k
Vertices: 56.3k
Marble. From Hadrian’s Villa (Tivoli, Italy). Now in Palazzo Massimo, Rome.
Hadrianic (117-138 d.C.)
Antinous was a Bithynian youth and lover of the Roman emperor Hadrian. Antinous was deified after his mysterious death: drowned in the Nile.
Antinous was identified with Osiris due to the manner of his death, and the cult of Antinous soon spread throughout the Roman Empire.
To this day, many excellent sculptural examples of Antinous’ likeness survive.