Human Generated Data

Title

Do Women Have to be Naked?

Date

2005

People

Artist: Guerrilla Girls, American Active 1985-present

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Gift of Barbara Lee in honor of Harvard's first woman President, Drew Gilpin Faust, 2021.491.8

Copyright

© Guerrilla Girls

Human Generated Data

Title

Do Women Have to be Naked?

People

Artist: Guerrilla Girls, American Active 1985-present

Date

2005

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Gift of Barbara Lee in honor of Harvard's first woman President, Drew Gilpin Faust, 2021.491.8

Copyright

© Guerrilla Girls

Machine Generated Data

Tags

Amazon
created on 2022-02-19

Poster 97.2
Advertisement 97.2
Person 90.9
Human 90.9
Text 77.7
Skin 76.7
Flyer 72.1
Brochure 72.1
Paper 72.1
Back 59.2

Clarifai
created on 2023-10-28

illustration 94.9
text 92.6
symbol 89.6
business 88.9
sign 88
desktop 86.9
vector 86.2
danger 81.7
bill 81.5
people 80.6
conceptual 80.3
banner 77.6
horizontal 74.1
warning 73.9
silhouette 73.8
offense 73.7
no person 70.6
endanger 68.8
care 68.5
caution 68.5

Imagga
created on 2022-02-19

magazine 83.7
product 70.4
creation 55.1
word 33.9
tag 31.6
graphic 31.4
definition 28.4
conceptual 28.2
design 27.6
cloud 27.5
representation 26.9
tags 26.5
sign 24.1
stylized 21.2
book jacket 20.1
style 19.3
text 18.3
symbol 16.8
jacket 16.6
business 15.8
art 12.9
global 12.8
international 12.4
wrapping 11.9
information 11.5
comic book 11.1
management 9.7
card 9.5
paper 9.4
danger 9.1
covering 8.9
world 8.9
caution 8.7
warning 8.6
grunge 8.5
technology 8.2
chemical 7.7
money 7.7
write 7.5
glowing 7.4
romance 7.1
market 7.1
love 7.1

Google
created on 2022-02-19

Organism 86.3
Happy 84.8
Yellow 84.5
Font 84.4
Poster 79
Abdomen 73
Photo caption 71.2
Advertising 69.3
Gesture 68.2
Chest 65.8
Navel 60
Physical fitness 58.8
Thigh 56.8
Art 52.4

Microsoft
created on 2022-02-19

text 100
book 96.8
poster 92.3
indoor 87.3
screenshot 82.7
dance 67.1

Color Analysis

Feature analysis

Amazon

Poster
Person
Poster 97.2%
Person 90.9%

Categories

Captions

Microsoft
created by unknown on 2022-02-19

a person looking at a book 30.5%

Clarifai
created by general-english-image-caption-blip on 2025-05-17

a photograph of a woman in a red dress sitting on a couch -100%

OpenAI GPT

Created by gpt-4 on 2025-01-27

This is an image of an artwork by the Guerrilla Girls, a group of anonymous activists who highlight gender and racial inequality in the art world. The image features bold text against a yellow background that reads, "Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?" Below this headline, another text states, "Less than 3% of the artists in the Modern Art sections are women, but 83% of the nudes are female." These statements comment on the representation of women in art and as artists in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

On the left side of the image is a black and white photograph of a reclining, nude female figure whose head has been superimposed with that of a gorilla. The figure is holding a mask that is also shaped like a gorilla's head. This visual is often associated with the Guerrilla Girls' activism, as it juxtaposes the traditional representation of the nude in art with a glaring symbol challenging the viewer to reconsider the portrayal of women in the art world.

At the bottom right, there's a caption that cites the statistics as "Selections from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, 2011," and it includes the Guerrilla Girls' slogan, "Conscience of the art world," along with their website URL: "guerrillagirls.com".

Created by gpt-4o-2024-05-13 on 2025-01-27

This image features a prominent message questioning gender equity in art representation, specifically at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The main text reads, "Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?" Below this, it provides additional statistics: "Less than 3% of the artists in the Modern Art sections are women, but 83% of the nudes are female."

The background of the image is divided into two parts: the left side displays an iconic image of a reclining nude woman, which has been altered to replace her head with that of a gorilla, symbolizing the identity of the Guerrilla Girls, an anonymous group of feminist activist artists. The woman lies on a red cloth. The right side has a yellow background with the textual information in bold black, purple, and pink fonts.

At the bottom of the image, it credits the "Guerrilla Girls, conscience of the art world," with a website link: "www.guerrillagirls.com".

Anthropic Claude

Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2025-01-27

This is a provocative protest poster by the Guerrilla Girls, an activist art group known for highlighting gender inequality in the art world. The image features a reclining nude figure with a gorilla head mask (a signature element of the Guerrilla Girls' work) against a bright yellow background. The poster poses a striking question about women's representation in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, highlighting the stark statistics that while only 3% of artists in the Modern Art sections are women, 83% of the nudes are female. This piece is a powerful commentary on the historical objectification of women in art versus their underrepresentation as artists. The design uses bold typography and a satirical approach to make its point about institutional sexism in the art world.

Created by claude-3-opus-20240229 on 2025-01-27

The image shows a black-and-white artistic nude photograph of a person with long hair wearing a gorilla mask, lounging on a pink background. The text overlay contrasts the low percentage of women artists represented in modern art museum collections (less than 3%) with the high percentage of female nudes in art (83%). The text poses the provocative question "Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?" highlighting the underrepresentation and objectification of women in the art world. The image is credited to the Guerrilla Girls, an activist group known for fighting sexism and racism in the arts.

Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2025-01-27

The image is a provocative poster that raises questions about gender representation in the art world. It features a close-up of a nude female figure against a bright yellow background, with text that challenges the idea that women have to be naked to gain entry to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The text also provides statistics about the gender disparity among artists represented in the museum's modern art collection, suggesting that there is a significant imbalance between the number of female artists and the prevalence of female nudes in the artwork.

Meta Llama

Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-01-27

This image appears to be a photograph of a computer screen displaying a graphic design or digital artwork. The dominant feature is a large, dark gray rectangle with a subtle gradient effect, reminiscent of a shadow or reflection. Superimposed over this rectangle are two lines of text, although they are too blurry to decipher.

In the bottom-left corner, a small section of a lighter gray color is visible, which may be part of the same design or a separate element. The overall atmosphere suggests that this image is a screenshot or a photograph of a digital artwork, possibly created using graphic design software or a digital painting program.

Amazon Nova

Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-01-27

The image is a poster with a yellow background. The poster features a cartoon-like illustration of a woman with a gorilla head, lying on a red bed with her legs crossed. She is holding a cigarette in her right hand. The woman's body is naked, and she has a gorilla head. The poster has a bold black text that reads, "Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?" Below the text is a smaller text that reads, "Less than 3% of the artists in the Modern Art sections are women, but 83% of the nudes are female." The poster is likely a commentary on the representation of women in art and the lack of female artists in major art museums. The poster's design is eye-catching and provocative, with the use of a gorilla head to represent the idea of women being objectified in art. The text highlights the disparity between the number of female artists and the number of nude female figures in art, suggesting that women are often reduced to their bodies in art. Overall, the poster is a powerful statement about the need for greater representation and recognition of female artists in the art world.

Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-01-27

The image is a poster with a provocative message about gender representation in art. The poster features a striking image of a gorilla wearing a mask, lying on a bed with a woman who is naked. The gorilla is holding a cigarette, adding to the controversial nature of the image. The text on the poster reads, "Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum?" This question is followed by statistics that highlight the underrepresentation of women artists in the Modern Art sections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The poster also states that less than 3% of the artists in the Modern Art sections are women, while 83% of the nudes are female. The Guerrilla Girls, a group of anonymous female artists, are credited with creating the poster as part of their ongoing campaign to raise awareness about gender inequality in the art world.

Text analysis

Amazon

get into the Met. Museum?
Do
have
to
be
naked
get
into
the
Met.
Museum?
Less
than
3%
artists
in
Modern
Art
sections
are
but
83%
of
nudes
female.
CONSCIENCE
of the nudes are female.
Less than 3% of the artists in the Modern
Art sections are women, but 83%
Do women have to be naked to
women,
women
WORLD
GIRLS
THE
GUERRILLA GIRLS CONSCIENCE OF THE ART WORLD
ART
GUERRILLA
OF
from
2004
City
Statistics from the Metropolitos Reserve of Art Rev York City 2004
York
Statistics
www.guerrillogirls.com
Metropolitos
Rev
Reserve

Google

Do women have to be naked to get into the Met. Museum? Less than 3% of the artists in the Modern Art sections are women, but 83% of the nudes are female. Stetisties from the Metrapoliten Museum al Art, New Yerk Ciny 2004 GUERRILLA GIRLS CONSCIENCE OF THE ART WORLD w w w.guerrillagirls.co m
Do
women
have
to
be
naked
get
into
the
Met.
Museum?
Less
than
3%
of
artists
in
Modern
Art
sections
are
women,
but
83%
nudes
female.
Stetisties
from
Metrapoliten
Museum
al
Art,
New
Yerk
Ciny
2004
GUERRILLA
GIRLS
CONSCIENCE
OF
THE
ART
WORLD
w
w.guerrillagirls.co
m