Human Generated Data

Title

manflowers

Date

1969

People

Artist: Corita Kent (Sister Mary Corita), American 1918 - 1986

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret Fisher Fund, 2008.199

Copyright

© Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Human Generated Data

Title

manflowers

People

Artist: Corita Kent (Sister Mary Corita), American 1918 - 1986

Date

1969

Classification

Prints

Credit Line

Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Margaret Fisher Fund, 2008.199

Copyright

© Courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Machine Generated Data

Tags

Amazon
created on 2019-04-07

Advertisement 99.5
Brochure 98.7
Paper 98.7
Flyer 98.7
Poster 86

Clarifai
created on 2018-03-16

illustration 96.6
desktop 93.7
art 93.6
paper 91.5
design 91.2
retro 90.4
old 89.4
artistic 88.4
vintage 85.6
culture 85.5
vector 84.8
dirty 84.6
texture 83.9
bill 82.7
ancient 82.7
abstract 82.5
color 82.2
symbol 81.8
woman 81.3
antique 79.8

Imagga
created on 2018-03-16

comic book 55.5
book jacket 52
jacket 40.5
art 34.1
wrapping 30.8
design 23.1
vintage 22.3
print media 22.2
covering 21.5
graphic 21.2
retro 19.7
pattern 18.5
drawing 18.1
decoration 17.9
grunge 17
floral 16.2
card 14.2
texture 13.9
holiday 13.6
envelope 13.6
stamp 13.6
wallpaper 13
celebration 12.8
frame 12.7
gold 12.3
shape 11.9
paint 11.8
paper 11.8
decorative 11.7
silhouette 11.6
mail 11.5
old 11.2
postmark 10.8
man 10.8
cartoon 10.7
color 10.6
party 10.3
icon 10.3
black 10.2
banner 10.1
symbol 10.1
artwork 10.1
light 10
backdrop 9.9
postage 9.8
modern 9.8
creative 9.7
painted 9.5
ornament 9.5
culture 9.4
letter 9.2
ornate 9.2
style 8.9
shows 8.9
printed 8.9
postal 8.8
artistic 8.7
post 8.6
sketch 8.6
greeting 8.4
traditional 8.3
swirl 8.3
painting 8.1
religion 8.1
leaf 7.8
golden 7.7
flower 7.7
winter 7.7
unique 7.6
elegance 7.6
fun 7.5
element 7.4
backgrounds 7.3
global 7.3
treasury 7.2
colorful 7.2
animal 7.1

Google
created on 2018-03-16

text 95.4
yellow 94.9
poster 94.8
font 84.5
art 84.1
graphic design 79.5
illustration 71.3
advertising 70
line 69.1
organism 68.6
area 67.2
fiction 67.1
design 65.6
graphics 61.8
pattern 60.7
visual arts 59.8
comics 57.5
fictional character 56.1
printmaking 55.5

Microsoft
created on 2018-03-16

text 100
book 99.7

Color Analysis

Feature analysis

Amazon

Poster 86%

Captions

Microsoft
created on 2018-03-16

a close up of a book 43%
close up of a book 36.1%
a close up of a book cover 36%

Azure OpenAI

Created by gpt-4o-2024-05-13 on 2024-12-16

This image appears to be a stylized, colorized photograph with text in a retro, poster-like design. The photograph depicts a person wearing a military uniform, possibly from the U.S. Army, leaning over another person who seems injured or in need of help. The colors used are highly saturated yellows and purples, creating a psychedelic effect. On the bottom half of the image, there is a green and yellow background with the text "MAN POWER!" on the left side and the question "WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE?" written in a stylized, handwritten font on the right side. The overall design and text suggest themes related to anti-war sentiment and a reflection on the human costs of conflict, potentially referencing the Vietnam War era.

Created by gpt-4 on 2024-12-16

This image appears to be a stylized, color-altered poster with a strong visual and textual message. The upper portion shows a person in a contemplative or distressed pose, kneeling and looking down at something in their hands with earnest attention or concern. The individual seems to be wearing a military-style jacket, indicated by the stencil reading "U.S. ARMY," which suggests a military or war-related context. The lower portion of the poster, in a contrasting green color, has text in a mix of fonts and sizes that reads "MAN-POWER!" and below that in a handwritten style, "Where have all the flowers gone?" The phrase "Where have all the flowers gone?" is a reference to a folk song from the 1960s that was associated with anti-war movements. The song contemplates the cycle of life and death and the senselessness of war—the "flowers" being a metaphor for young lives lost. The image combines these elements to pose a powerful question and might be critiquing the human cost of war, questioning military actions, or reflecting on the nature of human conflict. The visual style, suggestive of protest art and the starkness of the bright yellow and green, further emphasizes the urgency and emotional weight of its message.

Anthropic Claude

Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2024-12-16

The image appears to be a collage or mixed media artwork. It features a colorful, abstract design with bold orange and purple hues. In the center of the image, there is a shadowy figure depicted in a distorted, surreal manner. The figure appears to be wearing some kind of headpiece or covering. Below the figure, there is a green text overlay that asks "Where have all the flowers gone?". This text seems to be posing a contemplative or philosophical question. The overall aesthetic of the image has a psychedelic, avant-garde quality to it.

Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2024-12-16

This appears to be a stylized protest poster or artwork with a distinctly psychedelic 1960s aesthetic. The image is rendered in high contrast yellow and purple duotone in the top portion, showing what appears to be someone in casual clothing. The bottom portion of the poster is split between yellow and bright green sections, with text that reads "MAN POWER!" and "WHERE HAVE ALL THE FLOWERS GONE?" The style is reminiscent of anti-war protest art from the Vietnam War era, and the text likely references themes of peace and protest from that period. The overall composition has a gritty, screen-printed quality typical of protest posters and underground art of that time.

Meta Llama

Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-16

The image is a poster with a photograph of a man in the top half and text in the bottom half. The photograph is in yellow and purple, showing a man with short hair, wearing a jacket and pants, sitting on the ground. He appears to be holding something in his hands. In the bottom half of the poster, there is a green rectangle with the words "Where have all the flowers gone?" written in purple. To the left of the green rectangle, there is a yellow rectangle with the words "MAN POWER!" written in green. The background of the poster is white. Overall, the image appears to be a protest poster from the 1960s or 1970s, possibly related to the Vietnam War or the anti-war movement. The use of bold colors and simple graphics was common in protest posters of this era.

Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2024-12-16

The image is a poster with a photo of a man and some text. * The top half of the image is a photo of a man in a military uniform, possibly from the Vietnam War. He is sitting on the ground, looking down at something in his hand. The photo is in yellow and purple, with the man's face and clothing in purple and the background in yellow. * The bottom half of the image has a green background with the words "Where have ALL the flowers gone?" written in purple handwriting. To the left of this text is a yellow rectangle with the words "MAN POWER!" written in green block letters. * The overall design of the poster suggests that it is a protest or anti-war message, with the question "Where have ALL the flowers gone?" being a reference to the popular song of the same name by Peter, Paul and Mary. The use of bright colors and bold text adds to the sense of urgency and importance of the message.

Text analysis

Amazon

the
ALL
MAN
ER!
ER! floweRs
e
floweRs
MAN heRe hAU
POW
hAU
POW wh e ALL
heRe
goNE?
wh

Google

MAN
flowens
MAN the flowens ove
the
ove