-Art Article: Google Declares Abstract Art Similar to Tire, Housecat, Muammar Gaddafi



By artist & art writer Terry Ward



As a visual artist, I was crestfallen to learn that according to The Ultimate Current Highest Authority --Google-- one of my completely abstract paintings looks just like: a guinea hen, somebody's cat, and a tire.

Compare:
Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-01-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-01-equals


Another of my abstractions officially looks just like chopped strawberries, a bakery shelf of cookies topped with the Elmo character, and lots of happy smiling Asian people.

Compare:
Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-05-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-05-equals

Any artist --in fact web user-- can find out what Google thinks your images resemble. You might query your latest painting or search a family reunion snapshot of Aunt Minnie.

The amusing and sometimes alarming image search results come from a rather recent feature: a sort of facial recognition process run upon any sort of image --with or without faces.

How: One browses to Google, clicks on Images, and clicks the tiny camera icon inside the search field. This launches a pop-up a box allowing one to upload an image to query or to simply paste-in the URL of an image already on the web.

Perhaps the technology could be a boon some day to those looking to protect intellectual property. Celebrities, graphic designers, art photographers, fashion designers and such might some day be able to see if their images appeared elsewhere without authorization. Certainly Disney's lagal team is already at work.

Maybe police or genealogists searching for certain faces of the past could find clues in the global cyberfog. Missing persons searches perhaps could be improved. Even spies could perhaps search the world for certain kinds of fortifications or antennas.

Some day. Perhaps.

As it is, the new tool has a few bugs to work out.

The whole system seems to have a bias toward representational photography. Such a bias is fine when plugging in a representational photo. A search for images similar to --say-- George W Bush's main WikiPedia photo makes the system produce many pages of "visually similar" copies (and parody images) --along with inexplicable photos further down of Kanye West, Will Ferrell, and Jay Leno.

But plug in a totally abstract image and the output will still favor realism. Tourist snapshots and nature photos are Google's favorite outputs rather than abstract images --even those made by the same artist. Instead of showing similar abstract imagery, the system defaults to realism with similar colors and contrast characteristics. A close-up of smear of artist's paint with a scribble and a few gouge marks will equal --to the Google-bot-- a peacock tail, a shopping mall in western Poland, or a sprig of poison ivy.

Thankfully one abstraction at least was declared "visually similar" to some actual paintings --a Van Gogh and a Manet in fact. But the same image, Google insists, visually approximates a snuffling hedgehog, a spiderweb, and Libyan strongman-in-hiding Muammar Gaddafi. At least the rebels involved in the manhunt now know where to look.

Compare:
Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-10-the-art

Google says it resembles (Kadhafi even!)
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-10-equals


The basic Google Image Search page with camera icon is here:
http://www.google.com/imghp?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&tab=wi

And with the camera icon, one can see what is "visually similar" to one's self, one's art, or one's other images. Just be prepared for the image to be compared to foliage, world despots, or bowls of cat food.

More results:

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-15-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-15-equals

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-20-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-20-equals

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-25-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-25-equals

Another art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-30-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-30-equals

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-35-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-35-looklike

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-40-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-40-equals

Abstract art image
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-45-the-art

Google says it resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-45-equals


Search results compiled by artist and art-writer Terry Ward. Who according to Google looks just like Venezuelan actress/model Gaby Espino, Italian singer/songwriter Alan Sorrenti, Dutch software innovator Ronald van Woense, and actor Joseph Vassallo.

The artist
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-50-artist

Google says he resembles
http://tinyurl.com/google-similar-img-50-equals