Via Twitter @annzeekayArt & PhotographyNewsThe Getty Museum is challenging people to recreate famous artworks at homeThe Los Angeles institution asked its Twitter followers to share photos of themselves and their homes as historical pieces of workShareLink copied ✔️April 2, 2020Art & PhotographyNewsTextBrit Dawson With the world still on coronavirus lockdown, people are having to get creative with their free time. This includes museums – which have all been forced to close amid the pandemic – like LA’s The Getty, whose challenge to recreate famous artworks has gone viral. Posting on Twitter last week (March 25), the museum asked its followers to “recreate a work of art with objects (and people) in your home”. The Getty then shared four variations on artworks, created with clothes, Trader Joe’s bags, and dirty dishes. People quickly began sharing their own variations; one user recreated the famous HMV dog image with her own dog and an iPod Classic, another accurately depicted “The Astronomer” by Johannes Vermeer, while one man turned his son into a coyote to recreate a 16th century Nahuan illustration from The Florentine Codex. We challenge you to recreate a work of art with objects (and people) in your home.🥇 Choose your favorite artwork🥈 Find three things lying around your house⠀🥉 Recreate the artwork with those itemsAnd share with us. pic.twitter.com/9BNq35HY2V— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 25, 2020 The Getty’s challenge isn’t the first to recreate famous artworks in quarantine. Four roommates from Connecticut have set up an Instagram account called Covid Classics, which sees them use whatever they have in their apartment as props to reimagine some of the most recognised pieces of art in history, including “The Old Guitarist” by Picasso and “The Son of Man” by René Magritte. Speaking to Dazed yesterday (April 1), the group said: “We started with our favourite paintings and those that seemed famous and ‘doable’. We’ve had a lot of people tell us it buoys their spirit to see people stuck together making the most of it, being creative, expressing themselves. I hope our DIY style inspires other people to make the most of this time and be creative.” The Getty has been closed since March 14, and will remain closed until further notice. See some of the best responses to the museum’s challenge below. @GettyMuseumpic.twitter.com/FRDiqqmtBc— tsuassuna (@tsuassuna1) March 31, 2020The Virgin, Saint Elizabeth, and the Infants John the Baptist and Christ, but now with more unicorns...https://t.co/EUDgg7362Ypic.twitter.com/uSqoPFGF2d— Getty (@GettyMuseum) March 26, 2020You’ll have to blur your eyes to look at this one :) just a quick trial. pic.twitter.com/jAv4EEWCQP— TheBee 🐝 (@thebeehivetree) March 26, 2020Not quite Monet! pic.twitter.com/6Ejk0ayzCk— Jenpiumarta (@JenniferPiumar1) March 28, 2020Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThese photos celebrate friendship over romantic loveTender portraits that celebrate Poland’s Black immigrantsJoy Crookes and BACARDÍ® are connecting generations on the dance floor‘Tragedy, humour, beauty, absurdity’: Juergen Teller on his major new showDaniel Arnold’s new photo book captures NYC ‘uninterrupted’Buy a limited edition print to support women and children in GazaArt shows to leave the house for in November 2025These photos explore the emotional intensity of BDSMInside New York’s newly opened cult magazine archiveThis new short film embodies the spirit of MasqueradesParadigm Shift: This exhibition traces the major revolutions in video artMichella Bredahl’s new show confronts her relationship with her mother