We’ve all seen the many ways AI is affecting the art world, from a barrage of AI-generated slop to its infiltration of auction houses and the upper echelons of the industry.
But what if AI could also help to keep art’s integrity? It might be possible.
There are currently three conventional ways to authenticate a work of art, per Wired:
But now, a fourth way to authenticate art has arrived: AI.
Zurich-based Art Recognition says it has completed 500+ authenticity evaluations by using two types of artificial neural networks.
The bot has been busy: It might have identified a piece by famed artist Peter Paul Rubens (though it’s at odds with scholars) and potentially debunked a fake Van Gogh.
As Wired points out, AI could help art experts — not replace them. It’s a valuable tool, like an X-ray, that authenticators can have in their pocket for tricky cases.
Plus, it could save us all some money. While we might not be waving our auction paddles at Sotheby’s, forgeries are everywhere.