See Rembrandt's "The Night Watch" in Its Entirety, Thanks to AI Restoration

#artificialintelligence 

For 300 years, we only had a partial view of Rembrandt's 17th-century masterpiece "The Night Watch." But now, with the help of Artificial Intelligence (AI), researchers at the Rijksmuseum in the Netherlands were able to reconstruct missing pieces of the painting, giving us a rare view of what it looked like when the Golden Age Dutch artist finished it in 1642. In 1639, Rembrandt was commissioned to make the painting for a new banqueting hall at the headquarters of the Kloveniers, the civic militia guards (or musketeers) of Amsterdam. The painting was part of a series of seven militia portraits (schuttersstukken), commissioned by Captain Banninck Cocq along with 17 members of his militia. In 1715, "The Night Watch" was moved to what was at the time Amsterdam's City Hall, now the Royal Palace on Dam Square.

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