The New York Times wrote yesterday of a new start-up called Art.sy, which is digitizing works of fine art to catalog in its database, called the “Art Genome Project”. Their service is similar to Pandora, which mapped a “music genome” in order to encourage user discovery of new songs, or Netflix, which uses algorithms to predict and suggest films and movies a user might like.
Art.sy already has 20,000 images in their database, is partnering with galleries, museums, and other cultural institutions to increase their catalog. In addition to traditional subject, genre, and period/movement based descriptions, Art.sy’s team is also tagging works with categories that their system will use “to make connections that are seemingly from different worlds.” These categories include ideas such as “focus on the social margins,” or “personal histories,” and “private spaces.” The system will also search for images that are most similar in terms of composition and color, providing yet another way to access different images.
For more information, see Art.sy’s blog or visit the Art.sy website, where you can request a login or browse the beta site.
Via New York Times
One reply on “Art.sy: a New Online Art Discovery Tool”
There seem to be a lot more of these crowdsourced art tagging efforts around. See e.g. http://tagger.thepcf.org.uk and http://www.artigo.org