AI Gahuku's AI art generator app proved to be an instant hit on social media. But someone pointed out that it’s more flawed than one would expect. In some cases, the tool showed a racial bias by lightening the skin tone from an original selfie. It’s been speculated that it has to do with the way AI functions.
It’s known that for an AI to work, it has to be trained. This is done through human programming and machine learning algorithms crunching raw data. So, the more data that an AI gathers from its users, the more it can teach itself. And sometimes that’s where it goes wrong.
Some time ago, Microsoft developed an AI chatbot, Tay, that was programmed to talk just like a teen. But soon after Tay was launched, people started tweeting misogynistic and racist remarks and the parrot-like robot was repeating everything in no time. After the chatbot made 96K nasty utterances, Microsoft canceled the experiment.
There are dozens of apps that turn photos into paintings but this one is unique. Bored Panda contacted Sato, the Japanese man behind the project, to find out how he came up with the idea of making an AI to create Renaissance portraits.
It turns out, Sato is no rookie when it comes to programming. He mainly develops web apps from scratch in his spare time. The AI art generator was born out of Sato’s desire to entertain people. “So, I decided to utilize my programming skills to create the app.”
But Sato never expected the app and the beautiful paintings it creates to go viral like this. “I’m honestly very surprised that so many people are using it to turn themselves into these oil paintings,” said the app developer. When it comes to the inner workings of the app, Sato remains mysterious. “It’s my little secret regarding the database!”
It’s interesting that Sato’s app takes its inspiration from the Renaissance period. Literally meaning “rebirth”, it was a time of rediscovering classical art, philosophy, and literature from the earlier eras. Many other AI art generators aim to do the same by taking influence from past artists and styles. Could this be the start of an AI Renaissance? Perhaps.
2018 marked the first time that an AI artwork was auctioned at Christie’s. Titled Portrait of Edmond Belamy, the piece sold for $432,500 — almost 45 times its original estimate — and it feels like one of the Dutch Masters could have painted it. The only giveaways are the patches of digital artifacts and the strange signature in the bottom, which is part of the algorithm that made the artwork.
The AI itself was made by Obvious, an art collective based in Paris, France. Hugo Caselles-Dupré told Christie’s about what went into creating it. He said, “The algorithm is composed of two parts. On one side is the Generator, on the other the Discriminator.”
“We fed the system with a data set of 15,000 portraits painted between the 14th century to the 20th,” Hugo explained. “The Generator makes a new image based on the set, then the Discriminator tries to spot the difference between a human-made image and one created by the Generator.”
He said that the aim was to “fool the Discriminator into thinking that the new images are real-life portraits”. And this is how the Portrait of Edmond Belamy was created. You might have guessed already but there is no real Edmond Belamy — he’s simply a product of machine learning. Poor guy. At least he looks real, unlike some of the atrocities you can see here.
Signatures are used on artworks to identify the creator of the piece and confirm its validity. Regarding the algorithm that is printed in place of the signature, Hugo shared his views on who should be considered the creator of the artwork.
“If the artist is the one that creates the image, then that would be the machine,” he said. “If the artist is the one that holds the vision and wants to share the message, then that would be us.”
For now, AIs still have to rely on human input. Maybe in the future, they won’t, and we’ll see a new wave of independent artwork created by the machines. When that happens, we’ll always remember AI Gahuku as one of the original pioneers.






















