Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | Paid | My Orble | Login
Art historians at the University of California, Riverside, hope to identify people portrayed in 15th-century paintings using the same software used to spot terrorists in a crowd.

The researchers hope the software will be able to find matches between known figures in some portraits and unknown figures in others. First, however, they have to see whether programming designed for three-dimensional analysis will work as well with two dimensions.

The research team earned a $25,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to test the software on art pieces,the university announced April 25.

Recognizing people in paintings will satisfy natural human curiosity, of course, but lead researcher Conrad Rudolph said it also can help establish relationships between important political figures from the past. In the case of an unidentified person portrayed in the company of a known pope, for example, identifying the mystery man would show how well-connected he was with the leader of the Catholic Church.

'Identifying the subjects of these historical portraits can help us better understand the social history of the work of art.'

- Conrad Rudolph, art historian with the University of California, Riverside,

"Identifying the subjects of these historical portraits can help us better understand the social history of the work of art," Rudolph, a UC Riverside art historian, said in a statement.

Rudolph and his team still aren't sure, however, whether software made to recognize real, live human faces will work on two-dimensional images that weren't necessarily true to life. Queen Elizabeth I of England, for example, was known for commissioning portraits that depicted her as younger than she was and that fixed her bad teeth and smallpox scars.

To test the facial-recognition software, the research team first plans to compare busts to people's death masks, the clay molds that people used to make to commemorate famous people who died. The team's idea is that the software may have an easier time when both faces are 3D.

If that comparison works, researchers will move on to comparing death masks with 2D painted portraits, then to comparing painted portraits with one another. "If this 3D-to-3D test is encouraging, the project would systematically expand to 3D-to-2D and eventually test portraits of known subjects against unidentified portraits," Rudolph said.

If the 2D-to-2D method works, Rudolph says, other art historians may start using it regularly. It could also be used to compare and identify non-faces. The software could compare architectural details in buildings, for example, or even ancient writing in different manuscripts, to see if they were written in the same place or time. Right now, the only way to compare ancient handwriting is just to have an expert look at it.

A website and museum exhibit about the new facial recognition method are in the works, according to UC Riverside.
10
Vote
   


Indonesia ranks right behind the United States and China in the lineup of the world’s top 10 greenhouse gas emitters. It’s not because of smokestacks or freeways, but massive deforestation starting in the 1990s — driven In large part by the expansion of plantations for palm oil, an edible vegetable oil used in cookies, crackers, soap and European diesel fuel.

In January, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a proposed finding that biofuels derived from palm oil feedstocks failed to meet the standards set by the agency’s 2007 renewable fuels mandate. While they were found to have lower life-cycle emissions than conventional gasoline and diesel, palm oil came up short of the 20 percent reduction in related emissions that is required for inclusion in the new biofuel blends.

A public comment period on the finding ended last week after being extended by two months to accommodate the deluge of feedback. Many of the comments submitted came from the palm oil industry, which asserts that the E.P.A.’s estimates of palm oil-related emissions are seriously exaggerated.

Yet there is growing evidence that, if anything, the E.P.A.’s life-cycle emissions calculations for palm oil. were too conservative.
A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences used socioeconomic surveys, high-resolution satellite imagery and carbon mapping to plot past and future patterns of land conversion for a representative region in Indonesia, the Ketapang district of West Kalimantan Province in Borneo.

The researchers found that about two-thirds of the land outside protected areas in the study region are now leased to oil palm companies. If these conceded lands are converted to palm-fruit plantations at current expansion rates, one-third of the land in the area will be growing palms and intact forests will shrink to less than 4 percent of land cover by 2020.

One of the most striking trends, in terms of emissions, was a shift toward the development of carbon-dense peatlands for palm oil production, the researchers found. Peatland soils store significant amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

Their study said that by 2008, 70 percent of new plantations were being developed on peatlands; it predicted that up to 90 percent of emissions from palm oil plantations will come from peatlands by 2020.

Recognizing the climate dangers posed by the draining of peatlands for cultivation, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono issued a moratorium on the granting of new palm oil concessions in peatlands last year. This does nothing, however, to prevent development on previously allocated leases on peatlands, which make up an estimated 61 percent of all as-yet undeveloped concessions.
10
Vote
   


Run (or drive)—do not walk—to the former site of Dress Barn in the Westborough Shopping Plaza off Lyman Street. Displayed in the window are six large-scale oil canvases by Hopkinton's 28-year-old Dustin Neece, who one day may be a famous artist. That's what Ed Turner, owner of the Art and Frame Emporium thinks.

Oil Portrait Painting


Portrait Oil Painting, oil portrait paintings, oil portrait painting
Oil Portrait Painting


Neece already tasted fame. When he was in high school, his painting The Bowler was hung in the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Washington, DC) when it won the nation’s top student prize (Scholastic Art Award).

Portrait Oil Painting


Some of Neece's art will also be displayed at the Art and Frame Emporium. The exhibit will run through May 24, but may go longer. A small reception was held at the Emporium on Thursday, May 3 to launch this project.

Oil Portrait Paintings


Turner said, "There are people who make things happen, who watch things happen, and who wonder what happened. I make things happen." He continued, "I have a thousand ideas, but I can only work on the first three." One of Turner's ideas is to display art and products in empty storefronts in the plaza. He's worked with the mall owners to make this happen.

Neece's Story

Neece, a 2002 graduate of Hopkinton High School, and a 2006 graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), is a classically trained figurative artist. He is serious and centered about his craft. He told Westborough Patch, "During the past six years, I've spent my time and energy pouring myself and every ounce of energy and attention I have into making my work as strong as I possibly can."

He said later, "I have to be willing to die within myself to figure out what is meaningful and powerful emotionally."

Neece, who is inspired by Wyeth and Rembrandt, focuses on landscapes and figures. Using a muted limited palette (which he says is all he needs), he spends hours defining face and form in each canvas. He said, "I search for developing as many painterly qualities as I can... I paint as if I'm painting for the last time. If a section isn't good enough, I paint over it, sand it down, and paint it again." He also crops his canvases when he's done to define the final layout of his compositions.

Turner describes Neece's process as, "A tremendous desire to create an almost alchemical effect, where it's not paint anymore. There's an attempt to transcend the physical piece of art."

Inherited Paints

When Neece was 16, his grandfather died and left him oil paints. He had painted for fun when he was 8 or 9, but now his real art began. At that time, an exhibit of Hopkinton-based artist Jaime Alfonso inspired Neece. He spent that summer studying with Alfonso, and then continued to paint at Hopkinton High.

After high school, Neece studied graphic design at RISD, where he also painted. His work was discovered and purchased by art collectors from New York and Israel. He continued to develop his craft after RISD by studying in Norway with Odd Nerdrum, a renowned painter, and in London with Israel Zohar, an impressionistic painter.
10
Vote
   


Londoners interested in the visual arts are fortunate enough to live in a constant whirl of exhibitions. We have only to consider the first few months of this year — the great Leonardo show at the National Gallery, old Zoffanys and brave new Hockneys at the Royal Academy, a melancholy farewell to Freud at the National Portrait Gallery, Picasso at Tate Britain and the British Museum, Damien Hirst at Tate Modern, Mondrian at the Courtauld, Canaletto in Greenwich, Indian drawings in Dulwich, Turner and Claude replacing Leonardo in Trafalgar Square and Leonardo reappearing as an anatomist at Buckingham Palace — to realise how rich and fortunate we are to experience so much and such variety.

By the time these close they may well have been seen by millions of visitors, parting with not only many millions of pounds for their tickets and catalogues, but for their tea and crumpets, lunches and even dinners and breakfasts now that overwhelmingly popular exhibitions are sometimes open through the night. Add to these their bus and train fares, the costs of parking and congestion charges, and any other random pleasures attached to the event, and it is clear that they are not only important for the economy of the museums and galleries involved, but the national economy too


[ Click here to read more ]
19
Vote
   


The photographs at Leeds City Museum were taken by royal photographer Sir Cecil Beaton over three decades.

The Queen was a young princess when she first sat for Beaton in 1942 and he photographed her on many occasions, including coronation day in 1953


[ Click here to read more ]
10
Vote
   


Igor Babailov was born in Russia, but his art class here Sunday was like a homecoming.

oil painting, oil paintings, oil portrait, Oil Portrait Painting, oil portrait paintings, portrait, portrait drawings, portrait oil painting, portrait oil paintings, portrait painting, portrait paintings
Oil Portrait Painting

[ Click here to read more ]
19
Vote
   


Batley artist Tony Noble has had two more pieces of work selected for major exhibitions in London.

His drawing, ‘Man in a striped shirt’, has been selected from more than 1,300 entries to appear in the annual Royal Society of Portrait Painters Exhibition


[ Click here to read more ]
10
Vote
   


Patrons of Grosse Pointe's now-closed Punch & Judy Theater may find something familiar about the art work that Dick Komer of Bloomfield Hills recently brought in for appraisal. The work by Dutch-American artist Hanny Van Der Velde once hung in the movie theater on Kercheval Avenue in the area known as "the Hill."

Komer's family owned the theater and while he remembers the painting fondly, "the problem is, we never display it," he says


[ Click here to read more ]
19
Vote
   


Portrait Paintings of Oil Colors

April 20th 2012 02:10
Earlier when photography was not invented, oil portrait painting of oil colors and sketches were the mediums used by people to get the images of their loved ones made and conserved for future generations. In fact, oil painting portraits were very popular and greatly in demand in earlier times.


[ Click here to read more ]
19
Vote
   


President Museveni might have called them swine, but Parliament yesterday inducted Uganda’s former leaders into its roll of honour.

Sources said Speaker Rebecca Kadaga instructed House officials to pin up portraits of all former and present leaders in one place at Parliament in recognition of their contribution to the country


[ Click here to read more ]
10
Vote
   


More Posts
6 Posts
12 Posts
3 Posts
21 Posts dating from January 2012
Email Subscription
Receive e-mail notifications of new posts on this blog:

Ramya's Blogs

71 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
4 Post(s)
983 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
46 Post(s)
120 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
6 Post(s)
131 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
7 Post(s)
91 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
5 Post(s)
69 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
3 Post(s)
258 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
12 Post(s)
1218 Vote(s)
1 Comment(s)
49 Post(s)
Moderated by Ramya
Copyright © 2012 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]