Saint Basil's Cathedral, Moscow



Ready to embark on an adventure? Let's take a trip around the world. Got no cash? Strapped for time? No worries. On this vacation, you won't be leaving your desk…

Switzerland-based Corinne Vionnet is our guide to the world's most famous landmarks, monuments millions have visited before. Her art is created not by acrylic, oil, or watercolor, each piece is made by combining hundreds of tourist photos into one. After conducting an online keyword search and sifting through photo sharing sites, this Swiss/French artist carefully layers 200 to 300 photos on top of one another until she gets her desired result.

Look closely and you'll see dim shadows, vague silhouettes that aimlessly wander around. More than anything, these haunting figures make us think about our own fading memories and the inevitable passage of time. “Why do we always take the same picture, if not to interact with what already exists?,” Vionnet asks. “The photograph proves our presence. And to be true, the picture will be perfectly consistent with the pictures in our collective memory.”



Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China



Taj Mahal, India



Mecca, Saudi Arabia



La Alhambra, Granada



Kinderdijk, Holland



Stonehenge, England



Pyramids of Giza, Egypt



Acropolis of Athens, Greece



Chichen Itza, Mexico



Mount Fuji, Japan



World Trade Center, New York



Horseshoe Falls, Canada



Coliseum in Rome, Italy



Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany



Eiffel Tower in Paris, France



Louvre Pyramid in Paris, France



Himeji Castle, Japan

“This work is intrinsically linked to the people who took these pictures,” Vionnet says. “The collaboration is obvious, but it is without their knowledge. These pictures are on the Internet, to be seen by any eventual visitors. I am just one of those visitors. It is the sheer quantity of these almost identical pictures that gave me the idea of superimposing them. I do not think I would have had the idea if I had made all these pictures of the same places myself. Anyway, the work would loose its meaning.”

Corinne Vionnet's website