Technology

Can robots take over the art world?

How differently would you view Picasso’s “Guernica” if you knew it was drawn by a machine or the original manuscripts of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” if they were written by a robot?

Though the natural human anxiety that all our jobs will be automated in the coming decades is often associated with the manufacturing and service industries, robots may soon start to influence a much more neural field: art. 

Some tech companies have already started to produce robots able to effectively mimic the processes of painting, drawing, and writing.

Read More: Terence McKenna’s ‘cyberdelic’ predictions for Virtual Reality 25 years on

Robotic tools that are capable of drawing intricate designs have received praise for their complex detail. While digital marketing continues to grow as an important arena for companies trying to attract attention to their sites and products, there could be a large potential for use of robotically drawn graphics as more and more emphasis will be placed on quality art and designs. 

Unlike most human artists that normally stick to a certain style, robots can paint and draw a wide variety of creations that run the gamut of genres, as illustrated in this Business Insider article of the German robot eDavid. The drawing robot has an incredible arsenal that features up to 540 different stroke possibilities.

New York-based company Bond specializes in thank you notes and letters that look exactly as if they were written by a human hand. Company representatives say it’s not just a great way to get brownie points when writing a relative or friend, but can also be a huge business boost to sales teams or customer service professionals communicating with clients and maintaining those relationships.

Ashley Tam

“Technology simply provides tools for artists to express themselves,” said Ashley Tam, a product manager with Bond. “As a violin is a tool that allows a musician to bring melody to life, a 3D printer is a tool that helps artists express complex and detailed ideas. Similarly, our robots are tools that let people convey genuine thoughtfulness on beautiful keepsakes.”

For the time being, there is a ton of opportunity for human artists to collaborate with these machines to experiment with different techniques and works.

Artist and techie Pindar Van Arman, who creates drawing robots, told the Guardian in 2016 that the machines are becoming adept at making all the same aesthetic decisions that drive the best human painters. Sometimes, he added, they can do even better than the human hand.

“They’re quite stunning considering how they’re generated,” he said when reflecting on his robots’ paintings. “Looking at them as a piece of art, if I didn’t tell you this was done by a robot, you would never know.”

Van Arman gave a presentation at TED Talks on the subject, which you can view below:

Michael Krumholtz

View Comments

Recent Posts

Do AI Agents Dream of Digital Langoustines?

The shift that matters for agent commerce - From “Crypto AI” to general AI Today,…

2 days ago

WEF CEO Brende resigns without mentioning Epstein connections

Daring not to speak his name, today's WEF press release left out any mention of…

3 days ago

Building tomorrow’s creators: Inside a 9 year old’s AI education vision

According to a recent report by McKinsey, most organizations today are already experimenting with or…

4 days ago

The push and pull: How and why the EU forced Apple to open iPhone app distribution (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

For more than a decade, launching an app on an iPhone meant playing by one…

5 days ago

Tony Colon brings decades of experience in customer innovation to the Senior Executive Board at Prezent 

Deloitte’s latest State of AI in the Enterprise, released in January of this year, captured…

6 days ago

Helogen’s HEL-IOS to turn Starlab into autonomous biomanufacturing hub in orbit 

As the space industry continues to expand, driving technological progress, economic growth and strategic advances,…

1 week ago