Abstract

Painting is an art form that has long functioned as a major channel for the creative expression and communication of humans, its evolution taking place under an interplay with the science, technology, and social environments of the times. Therefore, understanding the process based on comprehensive data could shed light on how humans acted and manifested creatively under changing conditions. Yet, there exist few systematic frameworks that characterize the process for painting, which would require robust statistical methods for defining painting characteristics and identifying human’s creative developments, and data of high quality and sufficient quantity. Here we propose that the color contrast of a painting image signifying the heterogeneity in inter-pixel chromatic distance can be a useful representation of its style, integrating both the color and geometry. From the color contrasts of paintings from a large-scale, comprehensive archive of 179 853 high-quality images spanning several centuries we characterize the temporal evolutionary patterns of paintings, and present a deep study of an extraordinary expansion in creative diversity and individuality that came to define the modern era.

Highlights

  • Human have painted to express, record, and communicate ideas and recount experiences since long before the invention of writing [1]

  • BBC-Your Paintings (BYP) is mainly a collection of oil paintings preserved in, and originating from, the United Kingdom. (We show that BYP data still exhibits a comparable trend in color contrast with other datasets.) The paintings dated pre-1300s were excluded, as they were too few

  • To accomplish it we devised a theoretical and computational framework for quantifying color contrast based on the relationship between the colors and geometry of the paintings

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Summary

Introduction

Human have painted to express, record, and communicate ideas and recount experiences since long before the invention of writing [1].

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Conclusion
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