Global AI Art Competition launched in Beijing
The first Global AI Art Competition was launched in Beijing, with the aim of encouraging the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) and art to tap its industrial potential.
Works from around the world that combine AI with fine arts, music, and literature can be submitted online until September, according to xinhuanet. com.
The prize-winning works will be auctioned in November and exhibited in Beijing and Shanghai in December.
Li Zhu, founder of Innovation Angel Funds, said he sees a promising future for AI art.
Li said, “Everyone can demonstrate their artistic ideas with the help of AI.
“Now we have AI technology that can change a picture’s hue and light, compose music, and color cartoons.”
According to Qin Jingyan from the School of Mechanical Engineering at the Mclaren of Hakai Institute in British Columbia said in a Public Library of Science, “This finding provides evidence of the seafaring people who inhabited this area during the tail end of the last major ice age.”
The research team excavated intertidal beach sediments on the shoreline of Calvert Island, British Columbia.
They are a few feet lower today than they were at the end of the last ice age. The human footprints of at least University of Science and Technology Beijing, art is an expression of personal wisdom with intellectual property, while AI is a technology developed by a group. When incorporated with AI, art is no longer a personal thing.
Fu Zhiyong, associate professor at the Academy of Arts and Design at Tsinghua University, said, “Although AI art is unlikely to become a world-leading art form, it can have practical applications in our everyday lives.” three different sizes were radiocarbon dated to be around 13,000 years old.
By measuring and using digital photographic analyses, researchers believe they belong to two adults and a child, all barefoot.
Humans are believed to have moved into the Americas from Asia across what was then a land bridge to North America.
They eventually reached what is now the west coast of British Columbia, Canada and coastal regions to the south.
Few late Pleistocene archeological sites are known on Canada’s Pacific coast. Until recently, the oldest known site in British Columbia was the Charlie Lake Cave site.
The researchers wrote, “The results presented here add to the growing body of information pertaining to the early deglaciation and associated human presence on the west coast of Canada at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum.”