Simple Art as Abstractions of Photographs

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Date
2013
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ACM
Abstract
This paper shows that it is possible to semi-automatically process photographs into Simple Art. Simple Art is a term that we use to refer to a group of artistic styles such a child art, cave art, and Fine Artists as exemplified by Joan MirĀ“o. None of these styles has been previously studied by the NPR community. Our contribution is to provide a process that makes them accessible. We describe a method that automatically constructs a hierarchical model of an input photograph, and asks a user to identify objects inside it. Each object is a sub-tree, which can be rendered under user control. The method is demonstrated using emulations of Simple Art. We include an assessment of our results against a set of norms recommended by a Cultural Historian. We conclude that producing Simple Art raises important technical questions, especially surrounding the interplay between computational modelling and human abstractions.
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@inproceedings{
10.1145:2487276.2487288
, booktitle = {
Computational Aesthetics in Graphics, Visualization, and Imaging
}, editor = {
Donald House and Cindy Grimm
}, title = {{
Simple Art as Abstractions of Photographs
}}, author = {
Hall, Peter
and
Song, Yi-Zhe
}, year = {
2013
}, publisher = {
ACM
}, ISSN = {
1816-0859
}, ISBN = {
978-1-4503-2203-4
}, DOI = {
10.1145/2487276.2487288
} }
Citation