内容正文:
课时分层作业(三十二)
选修7 Unit 2 Robots
Ⅰ.阅读理解
(2022·福州市第一学期质量抽测)
Auguste Rodin spent the best part of four decades working on his masterpiece.The Mona Lisa,by contrast, took Leonardo da Vinci a mere 15 years or so.So we can only imagine what those masters would think of an upandcoming artist who can knock out complex works in under two hours.Not least because she's a robot.
Meet AiDa, the world's first robot artist to stage an exhibition, and, according to her creator, every bit as good as many of the abstract human painters working today.
Named in honour of the pioneering female mathematician Ada Lovelace, the artificial intelligence (AI) machine can draw a portrait by sight, and compose an “extremely beautiful” painting rich with meaning.
The humanoid machine can walk, talk and hold a pencil or brush.But it is AiDa's ability to teach itself new and ever more complicated means of creative expression that has set the art world excited.
From a simple photograph, whether a bee or a tree, the robot has done abstract paintings warning of the fragility (脆弱性) of the environment that would look at home in a top modern gallery.
“We just can't predict what she will do, what she's going to produce, what the limit of her output is,” said Aidan Meller, who is in charge of the Unsecured Futures exhibition which opens on June 12.
Meller is clear that his goal is not to replace human artists.Rather, he compares the rise of AI art to the coming of photography.“In the 1850s everyone thought photography would replace art and artists, but actually it became a new style bringing many new jobs.” he said.
“We are looking forward to the conversation AiDa brings in audiences,” said Lucy Seal, researcher for the project.“A measure of her artistic potential and success will be the discussion she inspires.Engaging people so that we feel empowered to reimagine our attitudes to organic life and our futures is a major aim of the project.”
1.Why does the author mention Auguste Rodin and da Vinci?