Art with Watson –
Hidden Portraits

An exploration into the hidden personas of some of history's foremost thinkers.

How man sees machine is a well-documented subject. But what about how machine sees man? We asked IBM Watson to show us through data analysis, and in doing that, he uncovered the true nature of seven of the world’s most profound thinkers–Charles Darwin, Eleanor Roosevelt, Marie Curie, Nikola Tesla, Paul Rand and Josephine Baker.

 
 
 

Hidden Portrait exhibit in SoHo

Fifteen international artists collaborated with Watson. They used insights only Watson could provide to create an exhibition of portraits that told stories about these historical icons that had never been told before.

 
 
 

Eleanor Roosevelt: First Lady of the World was one of 7 hidden portraits that were exhibited at the Cadillac House Gallery in SoHo


3-D animation projection set to original music

In Roosevelt’s writings, Watson found associations with contemporary music of 2007-2008. The artists created her portrait with original music, including vocals of phrases from Roosevelt’s speeches and writings, as well as an audio sample from her 1941 Library of Congress speech. Accompanying the track is a video projection of her 3-D likeness, with animated phrases from her writings.

 
 

Hidden Portrait Landing page

 
 

Other Hidden Portraits of the exhibit


Illustration on wooden slide puzzle

Watson found that the concepts in Darwin’s books on evolution resemble those behind many puzzles and board games. This led to the idea of evolution as a game itself– one that, when played to the end, allows us to discover something new and see how we’re all connected.
Illustration on wooden slide puzzle

 
 


Mirrored cube, live and generative electricity

Watson uncovered that the famed inventor was really an artist at heart. Tesla’s conflicted, dual personas–the scientist and the artist–served as inspiration for this portrait. The mirrored cube represents Tesla’s mind, while the inner electric grid speaks to his fame as a well-known scientist. The generative art that comes alive inside the cube represents Tesla’s lesser-known artistic side.

 
 


Dynamic still life using reactive technology

Through the analysis of Josephine’s Baker’s writings, Watson discovered contradictions to her flamboyant persona. She ranked very low in extroversion, hedonism and excitement-seeking traits, while ranking extremely high in cautiousness. This indicates that this seemingly uninhibited chanteuse was in fact an introvert.

 
 


Ink on plexiglas

Watson’s analysis revealed that Rand displayed anger in his writings. Inspired by Rand’s playful designs, the artists created a work composed of customized emojis, reflecting the emotions Watson surfaced in Rand’s writings.

 
 
 

AI – Photo booth:
Can a machine know people better
than they know themselves?

 
 
 
 

The Cognitive Photo Booth showed how Watson can reveal the person within.

Thousands of gallery guests queued up to chat with Watson, who then analyzed their answers to his questions using his Speech to Text and Tone Analyzer APIs, and created individual personality profiles.  

With the trait percentages, the emoji distribution was determined and used to create a custom, poster-sized portrait for each guest in the form of a printed data visualization.

Each guest's personality profile was then presented as a custom, poster-sized portrait, in form of a data visualization, printed in minutes.

 
 
 


The Making of Hidden Portraits

 

I was one of the lead creatives on the project, as well as being the CD/Art Director that brought the Eleanor Roosevelt portrait to life. I was also responsible for all promotional and event communications (Website, Event Invite, Social, Exhibition Catalog)