Medicine & TechnologyThe AI algorithm was trained to know more about Raphael's painting syle, including brushstrokes, shading, color palettes, and other stylistic aspects. Read to learn more.
Neanderthal art is said to be the oldest art in the world, which perhaps depicts a more abstract style than the stereotypical figure and animal paintings in caves. Check them out in this article.
The Assyrian artwork depicts the king's military campaigns and is one of the first major discoveries of their kind in Iraq since the 19th century. Read the article to learn more.
A new study reveals that early human ancestors likely engraved stone tablet art near the flickering light of a fire. Read on to learn the full details.
AI machine developments are increasing in the recent years. Read to know more about a new robot called Ai-Da, who presents unique skills compared other modern machines.
A snake in Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo along with other animals has created their own artwork that will be featured in an auction later this month. But do animals perceive art? Read the article to know more.
Artists and neuroscientists have launched an initiative to understand how art and music therapy could help in treating mental health disorders, such as PTSD, depression, and Alzheimer's disease.
Beyond Earht's new project Living Light recently launched artistic jellyfish crafts as part of research to provide artistic commercial space flights in the future.
Italian chemists created new non-toxic hydrogels that can erase graffiti from street art without destroying the latter. This makes restoration less difficult and safer.
For a very long time, Keightley has been searching for new furniture production materials. Unbeknownst to the artist, the answer has been on his dining table the whole time.
How many planets like our Earth are out there in space? Well, while the possibilities are endless, and with the vast expanses of the universe the search may be endless. But thanks to NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope, researchers have to date discovered 1,000 Earth-like exoplanets that seem to fit the bill. And in celebration of the record-breaking discovery, researchers at NASA are giving the public a view of what life on these exoplanets inhabited by humans might just look like—with a vintage feel.
Coming off the toes of Nov. 10 World Science Day for Peace and Development, established by UNESCO in 2001, CERN announced this week that an exhibition held in Belfast, Ireland may reveal another view of famed physicist John Stewart Bell’s extraordinary career. The exhibition entitled Action at a Distance: The Life and Legacy of John Stuart Bell celebrates the 50th anniversary of Bell’s famous theorem that revolutionized the field of quantum theory, and reveals much more than the numbers and variables in the head of the man.