
Art & tech last forever
Art & tech last forever
While art and technology can seem very different, they both share one core purpose: to serve humans.
At obode, we believe in bringing art and tech together to bring you the best of both.
At obode, we believe in bringing art and tech together to bring you the best of both.
ART
Brings aesthetic pleasure and spiritual nourishment

TECH
Brings a comfortable, convenient life and the best of what the future has to offer



Today, we are excited to announce an exclusive partnership with the National Gallery to further the missions of art and technology.
By combining the latest in consumer technology from obode and the rich history and culture of art from the National Gallery, we are driving forward a new wave of modern life that will last through the ages. Now you can join us on this journey.
By combining the latest in consumer technology from obode and the rich history and culture of art from the National Gallery, we are driving forward a new wave of modern life that will last through the ages. Now you can join us on this journey.
A high tech work of art
To celebrate this partnership, we developed two special robot vacuum cleaner sets
that combine technology and art in a unique way.
Now with the obode robot vacuum cleaners, you have the opportunity to
get special stickers designed based on cultural treasures from the National Gallery.
Using these stickers, you can decorate your cleaner and make it into your own personal work of art.
that combine technology and art in a unique way.
Now with the obode robot vacuum cleaners, you have the opportunity to
get special stickers designed based on cultural treasures from the National Gallery.
Using these stickers, you can decorate your cleaner and make it into your own personal work of art.
Inspiration from art
Three artists, three flowers. A shared fascination with nature, but very different styles.
These artists and the flowers they painted may be gone, but real beauty never fades,
and we are proud to bring these works of art into the new century.
These artists and the flowers they painted may be gone, but real beauty never fades,
and we are proud to bring these works of art into the new century.

Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder painted this glowing, glorious explosion of colour, showing newly discovered flowers imported from around the world. We’ll let you into a secret: Ambrosius had a little help from technology. He used one of the newly invented microscopes to study the flowers in detail.


The famous Impressionist Claude Monet wasn’t interested in recreating every detail: he focused on showing the atmosphere and creating an ‘impression’ of the pond. This expressive style also owes much to science and technology, as contemporary discoveries about how our brains process visual information taught him we see things as a mass of light and colour before we notice the details. So that’s how he painted.

Lastly, we’re off to the south of France to visit an artist who is forever associated with a different flower. As Vincent van Gogh said, “The sunflower is mine.” This particular painting features the flowers at every stage of life, from bud to bloom to decay.
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