In a first, AI-created art to be auctioned

The Portrait of Edmond Belamy depicts a chubby man

October 24, 2018 09:54 pm | Updated 09:54 pm IST - NEW YORK

A woman looks at Portrait of Edmond de Belamy created by an algorithm by French collective named OBVIOUS.

A woman looks at Portrait of Edmond de Belamy created by an algorithm by French collective named OBVIOUS.

Christie’s, the auction house that has sold paintings by Picasso and Monet at record prices, was poised on Tuesday to set another milestone with the first-ever auction of art created by artificial intelligence.

The AI-generated Portrait of Edmond Belamy depicts a slightly blurry chubby man in a dark frock-coat and white collar, and his off-center position leaves enough white space to show the artist’s signature as “min max Ex [log(D(x))]+Ez [log(1-D(G(z)))].

While the auction of machine-designed art is a first, some see the sale as yet another work of portraiture on the Christie’s auction block.

“It may not have been painted by a man in a powdered wig, but it is exactly the kind of artwork we have been selling for 250 years,” said Christie’s sale organiser Richard Lloyd in a statement.

The portrait offered by Christie’s for sale in New York from October 23 to 25 was created with AI programmed by the Paris-based collective Obvious, whose members include Hugo Caselles-Duprş, Pierre Fautrel and Gauthier Vernier. The work is estimated to fetch $7,000 to $10,000, according to the auction house.

The artwork was produced as an experiment “in the interface between art and artificial intelligence,” Christie’s said on its website. It was among several portraits produced by AI, all of them arranged in a fictitious Belamy family tree, including Baron de Belamy in a military sash and a countess in pink silks.

The AI method is called ‘generative adversarial network’ or GAN, and involves a two-part algorithm. Mr. Caselles-Duprş, quoted on the website, said the two parts are the generator and the discriminator.

First, a set of 15,0000 portraits painted between the 14th and 20th Centuries was fed into a computer. Then the generator made a new image based on that set, and the discriminator tried to spot the difference between a human-made image and one created by the generator.

“The aim is to fool the discriminator into thinking that the new images are real-life portraits,” Mr. Caselles-Duprş said.

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