Robot artist gets its first major exhibition â but is it truly creative?
The show will feature self-portraits by a machine with no concept of a self Aidan Meller
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A robot artist called Ai-Da will get its first major exhibition at Londonâs Design Museum this summer. But is the humanoid truly creative?
Ai-Daâs works are based on photos taken by cameras in the droidâs eyes. Algorithms then transform the images into a set of coordinates, which guide the robotâs drawing hand.
Credit: Aidan Meller
Ai-Daâs co-inventor, Aiden Meller, describes Ai-Daâs fragmented style as âshattered.â
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The Richard Rogers’ Drawing Gallery at the Chateau La Coste in southern France. The gallery is a pure cantilever, with all the load supported at one end only © James Reeve
The 200-hectare Chateau La Coste estate and vineyard in the Luberon, southern France, is an impressive fusion of art, architecture and viniculture, where visitors are greeted by a Louise Bourgeois
Maman sculpture nearly hovering over a shallow pool of water, designed by the Japanese architect Tadao Ando. The latest addition, completed this month, is a new Drawing Gallery by the architect Richard Rogers, which joins buildings by Renzo Piano, Jean-Michel Wilmotte, Frank Gehry and Oscar Niemeyer. And since Rogers retired from architecture last year, this may well be his last work.