Google's artificial intelligence tool turns your photos into artwork sought

Google's artificial intelligence tool turns your photos into artwork sought 

Google's artificial intelligence tool turns your photos into artwork sought



Google has announced the new tool Art Transfer in its application called Arts & Culture, which uses artificial intelligence to allow you to convert your images into works of art by applying the properties of popular paintings to your images, so that Art Transfer works with an artificial intelligence algorithm that analyzes famous paintings, to replicate its style in any image captured by the user.

Michelle Luo, product manager for Google Arts & Culture, wrote in a blog post: "Art Transfer doesn't mix just two things, or simply ride your image, and instead, it begins to reproduce a unique algorithm for your image inspired by your chosen art style."

Google explained that the new feature works entirely on the device without the help of the cloud or processing your image online, which means that your photos are not transferred to Google servers, and the tool (Art Transfer) is now available in the application (Google Arts & Culture) for android and iOS operating systems .

Google Arts & Culture is an online platform that allows anyone to access digital versions of museums, galleries and a wide range of renowned works of art, in partnership with many cultural institutions around the world.

The app contains some other gadgets that support computer vision, such as Art Selfie, which was launched two years ago, allowing you to take a picture of yourself and find your likeness in the famous paintings.

The search giant has previously launched a number of AI art tools, allowing anyone to produce a very fast drawing from a scribble, so that the app guesses what a person is trying to draw, and allows them to choose from the list of drawings of talented artists to help them produce anything visible quickly.

There is also a game (Quick, Draw!) that challenges players to paint a picture of something or an idea, and then uses the neuronal network of artificial intelligence to guess what the graphics represent, so that artificial intelligence learns from each drawing, increasing in the future its ability to guess correctly.

Four years ago, Russia-based Prisma launched an application that follows the same art transfer concept, and the German website DeepArt.io offers something similar.

Post a Comment

0 Comments