Arty Shapes
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Date
2008
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Eurographics Association
Abstract
This paper shows that shape simplification is a tool useful in Non-Photorealistic rendering from photographs, because it permits a level of abstraction otherwise unreachable. A variety of simple shapes (e.g. circles, triangles, squares, superellipses and so on) are optimally fitted to each region within a segmented photograph. The system automatically chooses the shape that best represents the region; the choice is made via a supervised classifier so the 'best shape' depends on the subjectivity of a user. The whole process is fully automatic, aside from the setting of two user variables to control the number of regions in a pair of segmentations - and even these can be left fixed for many images. A gallery of results shows how this work reaches towards the art of later Matisse, of Kandinsky, and other artists who favored shape simplification in their paintings.
Description
@inproceedings{:10.2312/COMPAESTH/COMPAESTH08/065-072,
booktitle = {Computational Aesthetics in Graphics, Visualization, and Imaging},
editor = {Douglas W. Cunningham and Victoria Interrante and Paul Brown and Jon McCormack},
title = {{Arty Shapes}},
author = {Song, Yi-Zhe and Rosin, Paul L. and Hall, Peter M. and Collomosse, John},
year = {2008},
publisher = {The Eurographics Association},
ISSN = {1816-0859},
ISBN = {978-3-905674-08-8},
DOI = {/10.2312/COMPAESTH/COMPAESTH08/065-072}
}