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Everybody loves to see a good "then and now" photo comparison of popular celebrities but what about a photo that is from both the "past" and the present? Thanks to the technology of the researchers at MIT-IBM Watson artificial intelligence Lab, people can transform photos into 15th-century oil paintings.

The site aiportraits.com uses an algorithm trained on 45,000 classical portraits to render any face into faux oil, watercolor, or ink. Ever wondered what today's stars would look like if they had their portrait done by done in the style of the Renaissance artists? Scroll down below to check out some museum-worthy masterpieces of current famous faces and don't forget to upvote your favorite celebrity photos!

The MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab uses what's called generative adversarial network (GAN) models, a popular AI technique which can be observed in deepfakes. GAN works by getting two neural networks to compete each other in order to produce an acceptable outcome: a generator, which looks at various examples and tries to mimic them, and a discriminator, which judges if they are real by comparing them with the same training examples. In the case of this face filter, they used 45,000 classical portraits to train the program, including paintings Titian, van Gogh, and Rembrandt.

Previous AI methods have created similar AI photo filters, but this algorithm does not merely “paint over” your face in a new style. GAN generates new features from scratch and certain elements in the photo prompts the algorithm on which style to use. Researchers say the algorithm “decides upon a Renaissance painting style, highlighting the elegance of the aquiline nose, the smoothness of the forehead.”

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“With AI Portraits Ars anyone is able to use GAN models to generate a new painting, where facial lines are completely redesigned. The model decides for itself which style to use for the portrait. Details of the face and background contribute to direct the model towards a style. In style transfer, there is usually a strong alteration of colors, but the features of the photo remain unchanged. AI Portraits Ars creates new forms, beyond altering the style of an existing photo.”

You might notice that in these portraits stars flashing their pearly whites don't appear in paint - there is a reason for that. “Portrait masters rarely paint smiling people because smiles and laughter were commonly associated with a more comic aspect of genre painting, and because the display of such an overt expression as smiling can seem to distort the face of the sitter,” they write. “This inability of artificial intelligence to reproduce our smiles is teaching us something about the history of art.”

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With anxiety over privacy implications after the recent FaceApp debacle, people might be less inclined to play with their portrait. The researchers promised users that the pictures uploaded are immediately deleted after processing by their servers and that they won’t be used for any other purpose other than some really old-fashioned fun. 

#11

Beyonce

Beyonce

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patatm avatar
DaVo
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Oh ofcourse people in the olden days only had one skincolor.

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Kim89
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

You need to understand how artificial intelligence works. Those researchers did not purposefully program their neural network to make the skin of the portrait white or anything. The network is trained on 45 000 paintings, which will not be hand-selected, but scraped from wherever you can easily scrape 45 000 pictures. If you type Renaissance painting in google images, you might eventually see some paintings featuring non-white people, but probably not in the first hundreds of pictures. Therefore, the proportion of non-white training examples will be very low, and accordingly, the output of the network will tend to be white-skinned. It's not a conscious choice, but a consequence of the fact that searching for "Renaissance paintings" tends to yield pictures that include white people.

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Leesa DeAndrea
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Doesn't look like her. Nose is too long & too narrow & the mouth much too small.

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Dorothy Parker
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This lab needs to go back to the drawing board. Changing hairlines and skin color? No, just no.

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Ashley Say Whaat?!?
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've always thought Beyoncé has got to be in the top list of the most beautiful women on our planet. She is sooo beautiful!

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#12

Woody Allen

Woody Allen

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CookieNeerrrrd
Community Member
4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The Ai version of him made the 'glasses' look like a make-up incident...

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#28

Dwayne Johnson

Dwayne Johnson

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#30

Donald Trump

Donald Trump

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Note: this post originally had 34 images. It’s been shortened to the top 30 images based on user votes.