Introducing e-David: The Latest in Robotic Artists

What would Michelangelo have to say about this?

Jasmine Crittenden
July 20, 2013

Having them take care of our more mundane tasks is one thing, but teaching them to make art? That's quite another. e-David, developed by computer scientists at the University of Konstanz (Baden-Wurttemburg), can create scarily detailed drawings and paintings from both photographs and real life.

As extraordinary as his powers might seem, e-David is actually an every day kind of robot, of the 'welding' variety. They're the type that are used in automobile manufacturing. A combination of sensors, a camera and a control computer (which gives the drawing commands) enables him to roll it out like Rembrandt.

In fact, e-David's 'style' is very much like that of the Dutch legend. He creates detail through the gradual build up of translucent layers, with each painting taking about ten hours to complete. Unsurprisingly, though, the end effect still tends towards the digitally-manipulated-photo-look, rather than that of the work of a genius. Art students, breathe a sigh of relief.

Oh, and in case you're wondering (or concerned), e-David, as far as we know, isn't named after Michelangelo's masterpiece. It's an acronym for 'Drawing Apparatus for Vivid Image Display).

e-David Robot Painting from eDavid on Vimeo.

[via the creators project]

Published on July 20, 2013 by Jasmine Crittenden
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