People around the globe have altered their lifestyles amid the coronavirus pandemic. For instance, balconies have turned into performance stages and windows are acting as tennis courts. Staying indoors has brought out the creative side of many individuals.
Like, recently, a UK couple decided to create a tiny art museum for their pets. Filippo Lorenzin, an employee of London’s Victoria and Albert Museum and his partner Marianna Benetti designed a magnificent to-scale art gallery for their two gerbils – Pandoro and Tiramisu, reports NDTV.
Have a look at the gerbils exploring the detailed museum:
As promised, this is the full video of our gerbils visiting the museum. No gerbils or gallery assistants were harmed in the making of this. from aww
To begin with, the creative duo laid down the floor plan of their ambitious project:
Plans for today: pic.twitter.com/Qiauu5dHyr
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 5, 2020
They then started building the tiny art museum:
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 5, 2020
They created a detailed art gallery that even included wall labels:
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 5, 2020
The museum even had a sign for guests that read, “please don’t chew.”
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 5, 2020
The gerbil noticing the tiny details:
Detail pic.twitter.com/hqC7ycLJcW
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 5, 2020
The gerbil gallery came with rodent-themed masterpieces like ‘Gerbil with a Pearl Earring’ and ‘Monna Lisa’, reports the New York Post:
Gallery view pic.twitter.com/AKViM144OE
— Filippo Lorenzin (@fi_lor) April 6, 2020
Many people loved the stunning gallery and its masterpieces:
Awesome project !! Love the details ! That's great !
— Gaz0line (@Gaz0line) April 6, 2020
https://twitter.com/sunyoungp_/status/1247272930813390849?s=20
😂😂😍😍 ABSOLUTELY AMAZING ❤️
And I specially love the “Gerbil with a Pearl Earring” 🥰— Rachael (@TheRepliKant) April 6, 2020
More of these, please!
— sue morgan (@Pearls_pet) April 7, 2020
This was an impressive and gorgeous set-up! The ‘Gerbil with a Pearl Earring’ was our favorite artwork. Tell us which masterpiece you loved the most!