Is this the future of art?
The French art collective Obvious is back with another project featuring artworks generated through artificial intelligence, this time training algorithms to blend prehistoric cave art with contemporary street art.
Obvious has teamed up with German graffiti artist Kai âRawsâ Imhof to produce the new work, which is based on one of his painting and ancient art from the famed French cave art complex Lascaux Parietal Burner #1, comes from the technical term for art painted in caves, and burner, a word for an elaborate graffiti piece.
By involving Lascaux, Obvious is reaching across the full span of human history, connecting the worldâs earliest artistic activity with advanced technology. Training the AI to create new works merging Rawsâs style with the work of the ancients was a two-step process, starting with examples of the Lascaux cave paintings.
First, Obvious trained the AI using machine learning Generative Adversarial Networks to create new drawings of animals in the prehistoric style.
âWe then trained a second type of algorithm to learn from the style present in Rawsâs artworks, and to translate this style on the drawings initially created with artificial intelligence,â a representative for the collective said in an email.
The result, based on a Raws work called Chaos and a ânewâ Lascaux animal figure, is a blend of the two aesthetics.
Obvious made a name for itself in 2018 when Christieâs New York auctioned off its work, Portrait of Edmond de Belamy, the first AI-generated artwork at auction, for $432,500âmore than 4,320 percent its high estimate of $10,000.
Source: https://news.artnet.com/art-world/obvious-cave-art-graffiti-mashup-1928105