Artificial intelligence also reaches the art of the world after a painted painting by Rembrandt was completely restored, after centuries of degradation.In the restoration, a neuronal network was used to stimulate the palette but also the artist's puncture.
Seventy years after Rembrandt painted "The Night Watch", the edges of the 16 -meter -wide piece were cut to suit the City Hall of Amsterdam.This cost the painting 60 centimeters on sides and about 30 centimeters at the top and bottom.
The digital border reset the composition, restores the partially cut characters and adds a few missing faces.Using a reproduction of the original from the seventeenth century as a reference, a team of researchers, conservatives, scientists and photographers used a neural network to simulate the artist's palette.
The four -month -old project involved scans, X -rays and 12.500 high resolution photos to train the network.At RijKSMuseum, where the "night hour" is part of the 1808 collection, the song is Rembrandt's largest and most famous work, as well as the first portrait of a civil guard.
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The director of Rijksmuseum, Taco Dibbits, told Gizmodo by e-mail that the extra space reorients the song and restores Rembrandt's carefully constructed composition.
The "night watch" belongs to the generations of cut, aged and modified paintings.The thieves cut another rembrant, "Storm on the Sea of Galilee" (1633), within it that remains empty at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.It is believed that the song "Diana and her companions" (1655-1656) from Vermeer lacks the right edge."Mona Lisa" (1503) has debatably lost some edges, as well as a range of blue and pink.
The museum has wrapped the song, which miraculously survived in front of two cuts and an acid spray.At the same time it was wrapped and transported throughout World Second.The museum has revealed the song and will exhibit it for three months.