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AI-powered Picasso: Meet the robot that turns your words into art

AI-powered Picasso: Meet the robot that turns your words into art
  • FRIDA, an artistic robot developed by Carnegie Mellon University, can turn users' ideas into physical paintings with bold brushstrokes in various techniques.
  • Users can direct FRIDA by providing a text description, artwork for style inspiration, or a photo to replicate in a painting.
  • The robot uses AI models similar to those used by OpenAI's ChatGPT and DALL-E.
In a world full of surprises, ChatGPT shook things up, but Carnegie Mellon researchers take the cake with an AI-powered robot that brings your words to life on canvas. Frida, an AI-driven robot, can transform your prompts into physical paintings with bold brushstrokes in various techniques. Perhaps most strikingly, the bot can change course as it paints to mimic the iterative nature of making art.

Frida, the artistic robot, blurs the boundaries between machines and creativity. The research team brings its masterpiece to London, showcasing how it's redefining art by collaborating with humans using generative intelligence, just like ChatGPT, but on canvas.

The Framework and Robotics Initiative for Developing Arts, or FRIDA, is named after Frida Kahlo. It is led by Peter Schaldenbrand, along with faculty members Jean Oh and Jim McCann, and has brought together students and researchers from across Carnegie Mellon University.

FRIDA allows users to direct it by providing a text description or a photo to replicate in a painting. The team is also testing other input methods, such as audio, by asking FRIDA to paint a picture while playing ABBA's "Dancing Queen."

According to Schaldenbrand, FRIDA is not an artist but a painting system that artists can collaborate with. Users can set high-level goals for FRIDA, and the robot can execute them using AI models similar to those used by OpenAI's ChatGPT and DALL-E 2. FRIDA simulates brush strokes and uses machine learning to assess its progress as it paints.

Unlike other robots, FRIDA looks at its brushstrokes in real time and adjusts them accordingly. According to Peter Schaldenbrand, a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon University, FRIDA is a robotic painting system that works with artists to execute their vision. The researchers who created FRIDA describe its art as playful and dreamy and admire its ability to turn mistakes into happy accidents.
Frida is here to help, not replace
Don't worry, artists! This AI won't steal your job - It's here to help you! Jean Oh, a faculty member at the University, said that FRIDA promotes human creativity and allows artists to express their ideas through painting. Another faculty member, Jim McCann, explained that FRIDA uses AI models to solve artistic problems. The FRIDA creators want to enhance human creativity, not replace it.

According to their research paper, FRIDA allows people to express their ideas using natural language or sample images. In the future, the researchers hope to expand FRIDA's capabilities to sculpting as well.

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