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Human Generated Data

Title

1914 Belgium, 1936 Spain / Neutrality? A scrap of paper!

Date

1936

People

Artist: John Heartfield, German 1891 - 1968

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, American Friends of the Busch-Reisinger Museum Fund, 1998.23.15

Copyright

© Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Human Generated Data

Title

1914 Belgium, 1936 Spain / Neutrality? A scrap of paper!

People

Artist: John Heartfield, German 1891 - 1968

Date

1936

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, American Friends of the Busch-Reisinger Museum Fund, 1998.23.15

Copyright

© Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Machine Generated Data

Tags

Amazon
created on 2021-12-14

Airplane 97.2
Aircraft 97.2
Transportation 97.2
Vehicle 97.2
Human 96.8
Person 92.2
Airplane 80.3
People 78.7
Machine 71
Spoke 60
Poster 59.4
Advertisement 59.4
Smoke 57.3

Clarifai
created on 2023-10-25

no person 99.1
military 98.4
retro 97.6
war 96.8
aircraft 95.5
man 94.8
airplane 94.7
people 94.5
one 93.9
vehicle 93.2
dirty 91.4
exploration 91.3
transportation system 89.7
two 89.3
wear 86.6
machinery 85.7
sepia pigment 85.3
outdoors 83.6
paper 83.4
antique 83.1

Imagga
created on 2021-12-14

brass 59.2
wind instrument 44.3
sax 39.7
cornet 35.2
musical instrument 26.7
device 25.4
horn 23
old 22.3
vintage 17.4
grunge 17
antique 15.7
aged 15.4
texture 15.3
music 15
paper 14.9
musical 14.4
ancient 13
metal 12.9
retro 12.3
architecture 11.7
history 11.6
travel 11.3
brown 11
bass 10.8
instrument 10.8
wallpaper 10.7
old fashioned 10.5
art 10.4
golden 10.3
instrumentality 10
detail 9.6
structure 9.6
historic 9.2
material 8.9
jazz 8.8
war 8.7
artistic 8.7
play 8.6
rough 8.2
industrial 8.2
dirty 8.1
sound 8
building 7.9
design 7.9
musician 7.8
space 7.8
empty 7.7
military 7.7
culture 7.7
stain 7.7
obsolete 7.7
decorative 7.5
machine 7.4
gold 7.4
light 7.3
black 7.2
part 7.1

Google
created on 2021-12-14

Motor vehicle 83.7
Poster 83.5
Line 82.1
Font 79.4
Art 72.1
Illustration 69.6
Aviation 67.6
Vehicle 66.4
Aircraft 64.7
Stock photography 62.5
Machine 61
Paper 57.4
Drawing 56.7
Paper product 56
Book 50.9
Aerospace engineering 50.9

Microsoft
created on 2021-12-14

text 99.5
book 97.1
vehicle 84.9
old 55.8

Color Analysis

Face analysis

Amazon

AWS Rekognition

Age 54-72
Gender Male, 86.9%
Calm 60.3%
Happy 32.7%
Sad 2.9%
Angry 1.1%
Fear 1%
Disgusted 1%
Surprised 0.7%
Confused 0.3%

Feature analysis

Amazon

Airplane
Person
Poster
Airplane 97.2%

Categories

Captions

OpenAI GPT

Created by gpt-4 on 2024-12-21

The image depicts a vintage poster or print that appears to be a piece of propaganda or political messaging. At the top, there are two dates with corresponding countries, "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien," likely referencing historical events or wartime periods involving Belgium and Spain. Dominating the center and bottom of the image is a fighter pilot wearing a flight suit and helmet, with goggles and an oxygen mask. He's seated in the cockpit of an aircraft, gripping what appear to be the controls, with a clear view of his instrument panel. The pilot appears focused, and the angle suggests he is in active flight. The image contains text in a large and bold font that reads: "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" This translates from German to English as "Neutrality? A scrap of paper!" suggesting a disdain or disregard for the concept of neutrality, possibly in the context of international conflicts, such as World War I with Belgium in 1914 and the Spanish Civil War in 1936. Additionally, there are airplanes visible in the background, indicating aerial combat or flight. The bottom right corner features a caption that reads "Fotomontage: John Heartfield," identifying the person responsible for creating this photomontage as John Heartfield, who was known for his anti-fascist political art during the early to mid-20th century. The artwork combines photography and graphic design to convey a strong political message, typical of Heartfield's style, which was influential in the development of political art.

Created by gpt-4o-2024-05-13 on 2024-12-21

This is a historical propaganda poster. The image displays three military aircraft in flight, dropping bombs labeled "NEUTRALITÄT?" (Neutrality?). The bombs are falling towards the ground, illustrating a scene of conflict. Prominently in the foreground, a soldier is seen operating a mounted machine gun, wearing goggles and headgear, indicative of aerial warfare. The text at the top of the image reads "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien," referencing Belgium in 1914 during World War I and Spain in 1936 during the Spanish Civil War. These dates contextualize the theme of invasion and conflict, despite supposed neutrality. At the bottom, the German text reads, "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" which translates to "Neutrality? A Scrap of Paper!" The source of the photomontage is credited to John Heartfield. The overall tone and content suggest a critical view of the concept of neutrality in the face of aggression.

Anthropic Claude

Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2024-12-21

The image appears to be a propaganda poster from the Spanish Civil War era. It depicts a World War I-era biplane and a World War II-era armored fighting vehicle, along with the text "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien" and "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" (German for "Neutrality? A scrap of paper!"). The poster seems to be making a point about the futility of neutrality in the face of war and conflict.

Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2024-12-21

This is a German propaganda poster from the World War II era. The image shows a dramatic wartime scene with military aircraft dropping bombs in the background, while in the foreground there appears to be an airman or gunner operating what looks like an aircraft-mounted camera or gun. The sepia-toned image has text at the top reading "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien" (referring to Belgium 1914 and Spain 1936), and at the bottom "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" which translates to "Neutrality? A scrap of paper!" The poster appears to be commenting on the concept of neutrality during wartime, suggesting it is meaningless. The composition is dramatic and meant to evoke a sense of action and warfare, typical of propaganda materials from this period.

Meta Llama

Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-21

The image is a vintage poster in sepia tones, featuring a man in a plane and several other planes in the sky. * The top of the image has the text "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien" in brown font. * In the center of the image, there is a man sitting in a small plane, wearing a helmet and goggles. He is holding a camera and appears to be taking a picture. * There are several other planes flying in the sky above him, some of which have bombs or other objects attached to them. * At the bottom of the image, there is the text "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" in brown font. This translates to "Neutrality? A scrap of paper!" in English. * The background of the image is a cloudy sky with smoke or fog visible in the distance. The image appears to be a propaganda poster from World War I or II, promoting the idea of neutrality and criticizing the use of force by other countries. The image suggests that neutrality is not a viable option and that it is better to take action to protect oneself.

Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-21

The image is a sepia-toned poster featuring an airplane and a pilot. The title at the top reads "1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien" in German, which translates to "1914 Belgium, 1936 Spain." The main focus of the poster is a pilot sitting in the cockpit of an airplane, wearing a helmet and goggles. He is holding a machine gun and appears to be in the midst of a battle. In the background, there are several other airplanes flying around him, some of which have been damaged or destroyed. At the bottom of the poster, there is a caption that reads "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" which translates to "Neutrality? A scrap of paper!" This suggests that the poster is commenting on the concept of neutrality during times of war, implying that it is not a reliable or effective way to avoid conflict. Overall, the poster appears to be a commentary on the futility of neutrality in the face of war, using the imagery of airplanes and pilots to convey a sense of danger and urgency.

Amazon Nova

Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-02-24

A poster features a pilot in a cockpit with a machine gun and goggles. The poster is in German and has the words "Neutralität? Ein fetze Papier!" The poster is old and has a sepia tone. The poster has two planes flying in the sky, one with a German flag. The poster also has two bombs falling from the sky. The poster has the years 1914 and 1936 in the top left corner.

Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-02-24

The image is a poster with a military theme. The top part of the poster shows three airplanes in the sky. Two of them are flying in the same direction, while the third one is flying in the opposite direction. The poster also shows a man in a fighter plane, wearing a helmet and goggles, and holding a gun. The poster has a German text that reads "Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!" which translates to "Neutrality? A piece of paper!" The poster also has a watermark of the photographer's name, John Heartfield.

Text analysis

Amazon

1936
Ein
1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien
Fetzen
Spanien
1914
Belgien,
Heartfield
John
Papier!
Folomontage John Heartfield
Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier!
NEUTRAL
Folomontage
Neutralität?
530

Google

1914 Belgien, 1936 Spanien Neutralität? Ein Fetzen Papier! Folomontage John Heartfield
1914
Belgien,
1936
Spanien
Neutralität?
Ein
Fetzen
Papier!
Folomontage
John
Heartfield