Tecnología e innovación

Artist Shows How Roman Emperors Looked In Real Life By Using Facial Reconstruction, AI, And Photoshop

If you’ve ever set foot in a museum of Greek and Roman art, you’ve probably seen the rows of tranquil-looking concrete busts. They do, however, have no pupils in the eyes, lack any sort of color, and in general, get kinda repetitive after the third and fourth display hall.

But the artist named Haround Binous is bringing the dusty emperors back to life in a series of hyper-realistic illustrations. The guy from Université de Lausanne, Switzerland is combining facial recognition AI, Photoshop, and historical references to revive all the Roman emperors, from Augustus to Valentinian III.

The result is so precise and true to life, these ancient dudes with luscious curls and sun-kissed tans could easily pass as A-list Hollywood actors off duty. I mean, look at Augustus—is that you, Daniel Craig?

#1 Philip II

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#2 Nero

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#3 Galba

Image credits: Haroun Binous

Turning cold emperors’ stones into hyperreal flesh may seem like a mission impossible. But with the help of today’s machine learning technologies, images can be reconstructed and brought to life in colorful illustrations.

This is what Haroun has done for his Roman emperor recreations. With the help of AI, Photoshop, and historical references, he came up with these hyperrealistic illustrations giving us a glimpse of how great Roman emperors like Caius Julius Cæsar Germanicus and Nero looked in real life.

#4 Philip The Arab

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#5 Augustus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#6 Trajan

Image credits: Haroun Binous

Haroun Binous said he used “superposition and simultaneous comparison” techniques that “allowed me to arrive at these faces.”But the facial features are just one part of the job.

In order to get hold of the textures and colors, Haroun researched original historical sources. “Eyes, hair, and colors were based on quotes from Suetonius,” he wrote.

#7 Tiberius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#8 Caligula

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#9 Vitellius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

In reality, it’s not entirely clear how accurate the emperors’ busts are to begin with since our best evidence of how they looked are the busts themselves. However, we do perceive them as roughly accurate, since we now know that stylistically, the Romans preferred realism in their sculpture dating back to the Republican period.

Other than busts, historical sources do reveal a thing or two about the people of the Roman Empire. The Roman historian Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus, for example, who wrote during the early Imperial era, described some of the emperors in his notes.

#10 Domitian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#11 Valerian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#12 Diocletian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

According to Christies, Suetonius was very receptive to physiognomic thinking and “may have been swayed by them in his description of the fearsome appearance of Caligula.” He was presented as the epitome of arbitrary cruelty and immoral excesses that was reflected in his description of Caligula’s face.

On the other side of the opposite extreme, there was a fair share of heroic idealization of the most powerful men and it’s likely that their busts have done some justice to their looks. Who knows—maybe some of the most breathtaking busts have undergone an ancient equivalent of airbrushing? That, we may never know.

#13 Theodosius I

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#14 Claudius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#15 Hadrian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#16 Gordian III

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#17 Claudius Gothicus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#18 Lucius Verus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#19 Marcus Aurelius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#20 Commodus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#21 Gordian II

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#22 Tacitus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#23 Otho

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#24 Titus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#25 Nerva

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#26 Antoninus Pius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#27 Caracalla

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#28 Maximinus Thrax

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#29 Gordian I

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#30 Maximian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#31 Galerius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#32 Valens

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#33 Valentinian III

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#34 Didius Julianus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#35 Hostilian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#36 Pertinax

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#37 Macrinus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#38 Severus Alexander

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#39 Pupienus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#40 Decius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#41 Volusianus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#42 Quintillus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#43 Probus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#44 Carinus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#45 Vespasian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#46 Balbinus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#47 Numerian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#48 Constantius Chlorus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#49 Constans I

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#50 Julian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#51 Valentinian I

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#52 Magnus Maximus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#53 Septimius Severus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#54 Geta

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#55 Elagabalus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#56 Gallienus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#57 Saloninus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#58 Florianus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#59 Constantine The Great

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#60 Maxentius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#61 Licinius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#62 Constantius II

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#63 Trebonianus Gallus

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#64 Aurelian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#65 Maximinus II

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#66 Diadumenian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#67 Gratian

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#68 Valentinian II

Image credits: Haroun Binous

#69 Honorius

Image credits: Haroun Binous

This content was originally published here.

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