Khaleej Times

Robot helps artists paint murals

- Saman Haziq saman@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Whoever said robots were too rigid to do anything artistic should have been at Gitex to watch a robot and a human create an entire mural together.

The live mural by a robot and an artist, a first of its kind in the region, sure made heads turn in the Dubai Internet City pavilion at the Gitex Technology Week on Monday. It marked a creative partnershi­p between human and machine, both working together to produce compelling artworks.

Curated by Dubai-based art and social impact platform The Ajala Project, in partnershi­p with Uber UAE and Dubai Internet City, the activation featured five UAE-based artists of different nationalit­ies who created the murals that highlighte­d nine major locations across Dubai. Aside from being Uber hotspots, the places depict the idea of mobility, technology, and how Dubai is becoming a centre for creativity and innovation.

Explaining the procedure, Hassan Adebayo Bello, founder of The Ajala Project, said: “The artists create a digital illustrati­on that reimagines nine major hotspots in Dubai. We then feed in the artwork by the artist into the self-drawing robot that then draws the outline of the artwork on the canvas, which takes approximat­ely 30 mins or less.”

“The robot and the artist work in parallel to complete each artwork, so the robot acts as an assistant of the artist. It takes between 30 minutes to three hours to produce the collaborat­ed artwork between the robot and the artist,” Bello said.

The artists who were chosen to draw alongside the robot are Rami Afifi from Palestine; Sijin Gopinathan from India; Nori Elhami from Pakistani; Ahd Hany from Egypt; and Dina Sami from Dubai/NYC.

Sharing his experience of drawing with the robot, artist Sijin, who recreated an artwork showing a demystifie­d Dubai Downtown, said: “Working with a robot is something I had never imagined before. It was really an awesome and a challengin­g experience for me, as of course it is a machine and goes quite fast. The robot kept on sketching but I needed to change my positions in between or I took breaks to drink water or just look around a bit. It was the speed of the robot that I found a bit hard to cope up with at certain levels.”

The Ajala Project empowers communitie­s through art. They crowdfund for artists, creatives and charities through their events, exhibition­s, projects and partnershi­ps.

(Working with a robot) was really an awesome and a challengin­g experience for me, as of course it is a machine and goes quite fast.”

Sijin Gopinathan, artist, India

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