Waikato Times

AI creates perfect Van Gogh replicas

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Masterpiec­es by Vincent van Gogh have been replicated using new technology and are on sale as £17,500 (NZ$35,000) souvenirs at a London exhibition.

The Dutch post-Impression­ist was littleknow­n before his suicide, but his work became among the most revered and valuable in the world, with prices reaching £116 million at auction.

Sophistica­ted 3D copies of paintings including Boulevard de Clichy and Sunflowers have been made using state-of the-art scanning and printing techniques. Every brush stroke is recreated in the reproducti­ons, which also have art dealer’s seals and period frames to add greater realism.

These clones are now available for £17,500, and are hanging alongside £20 T-shirts in the gift shop of an exhibition on London’s South Bank. The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam is overseeing the show, and the replica prints, called ‘‘Relievos’’, have already proved a hit with buyers after first going on sale in Hong Kong.

Officials at the Van Gogh Museum believe their technology is leading the way in the burgeoning industry of art reproducti­on, which is being accelerate­d by 3D printing and AI that mimics the styles of masters from Johannes Vermeer to Georges Seurat.

The museum’s bosses have pledged that a limited number of replicated works will be made, to ensure their value for buyers, and all profits will be reinvested into the museum. However, there is no limit on making what they deem to be educationa­l works.

‘‘It took off,’’ said Adriaan Donszelman­n, managing director of the museum. ‘‘It is a limited group of people who can afford to buy it. People buy them to put in their house or on their boat. It took off commercial­ly, and it took off educationa­lly.’’

The museum hopes visually impaired people can enjoy the textured paintings, which could never be touched if they were the real thing.

The copying process was first tested a decade ago using techniques developed by Fujifilm, and the vast source material of the Van Gogh Museum. A mould is created by scanning a photograph, before ink is applied to the textured surface.

All canvasses are the same size as the original works. They were launched commercial­ly in 2013, with a maximum of 260 copies allowed for each of nine selected prints, including Sunflowers, Wheatfield Under Thunderclo­uds and Lilies. About half of the 2340 copies have been sold to date.

The reproducti­ons will be available at the Meet Vincent van Gogh Experience, which opens today.

Scientists at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology have been perfecting the AI-assisted printing technique. The developers argued it will allow art to be seen by many more people outside cultural centres such as Amsterdam or London. – Telegraph Group

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