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King Charles III has just acquired a royal portrait – drawn not by a man, but by a robot.
In the scene, which looked as if he had been released by the anti-utopian film Ridley Scott, the picture of the monarch, created by a robot named Ai-DA, was presented at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva. But AI-DA is not a typical robot.
The entitled “Algorithm King”, oil painting-lasting the robot of a-yes, The first surrealist-robot artist in the worldAi-DA, created in 2019, can draw through high-tech chambers, complex algorithms of artificial intelligence and a specially designed robotic hand.
Her last royal work was presented along with the previous portrait of the deceased Queen Elizabeth II, the “queen algorithm”, which painted on the occasion of the platinum anniversary.
Speaking at the United Nations of the United Nations “AI Forever”, Aye said: “The idea of my portrait of the greatness of King Charles III is not just a creative act, this is this A statement about the developing role of artificial intelligence in our society And reflect on how artificial intelligence forms a cultural landscape. “
Created by the gallery and researcher Aidan Melller, Ai-Da Can Design, Paint, Sculpt and even participates in conversations thanks to a complex linguistic model.
“Ay-yes decided to draw the same Majesty King Charles III, because he has a wonderful and stocastic style of leadership”, ”,”, Melller said to EURONEWS Culture. “Being a monarch and at the same time a long -term supporter of art and stability, King Charles emphasizes some fears that, for example, the AI -DA work is also trying to explore the tension between traditional and modern. “
Ay-do already wrote a story. Earlier this year, the robot table Sold Sotheby’s for an impressive amount of $ 1 millionThe field but the real meaning of its work can be less in the gallery, and more in the discussion that it causes.
“The AI-DA work makes us revise long-term assumptions about human ingenuity and the purpose of art itself”Melller explained. “In a broader sense, the portrait offers a discussion of moral use of artificial intelligence in art: how people and machines can work together.”