SLAC Today logo

Colloquium: When Computers Look at Art: Image Analysis of the Visual Arts

New computer methods have been used to shed light on a number of recent controversies in the study of art. For example, computer fractal analysis has been used in authentication studies of paintings attributed to Jackson Pollock recently discovered by Alex Matter. Computer wavelet analysis has been used for attribution of the contributors in Perugino's Holy Family. An international group of computer and image scientists is studying the brushstrokes in paintings by van Gogh for detecting forgeries. Sophisticated computer analysis of perspective, shading, color and form has shed light on David Hockney's bold claim that as early as 1420, Renaissance artists employed optical devices such as concave mirrors to project images onto their canvases.

How do these computer methods work? What can computers reveal about images that even the best-trained connoisseurs, art historians and artists can not? How much more powerful and revealing will these methods become? In short, how is computer image analysis changing our understanding of art?

In this afternoon's colloquium, Stanford Professor David G. Stork will present When Computers Look at Art: Image Analysis of the Visual Arts. The colloquium takes place at 4:15 today in Panofsky Auditorium. All are invited to attend.

—SLAC Today, June 30, 2008