Lost parts of Rembrandt masterpiece restored by AI

It's one of the great acts of art vandalism. In 1715 large chunks of Rembrandt's masterpiece "The Night Watch" were cut off in order to fit the colossal canvas into a new home.

Now for the first time in more than 300 years, visitors to Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum can see the painting in its original form thanks to a stunning reconstruction of the lost pieces.

Based on a small 17th-century copy of "The Night Watch," scientists used artificial intelligence to recreate the missing sections, which have been printed and mounted around the famed artwork.

"It's very exciting to see," Rijksmuseum director Taco Dibbits told AFP. "Because you know the painting since you're a child, and you feel that suddenly you've taken a step back in time for 300 years.

The reconstruction has revealed the true dynamism of Rembrandt's original composition, with the two key people at the centre of the painting, Captain Frans Banninck Cocq and Lieutenant Willem van Ruytenburch, now offset to the side, said Dibbits.

The lost figures of two men and a small boy have meanwhile been restored to the left hand side where a 60-centimeter (24-inch) strip was cut off the painting, which even in its smaller form measures a huge 3.79 meters by 4.36 meters (12 feet, five inches by 14 feet, four inches).

The Rijksmuseum, which recently reopened after the relaxation of coronavirus measures, will keep the panels in place for three months, as part of a huge restoration of the painting launched in 2019.

Rembrandt painted "The Night Watch" in 1642 after a commission by Cocq, the mayor and leader of the civic guard of Amsterdam, to depict the officers and other members of the militia.

After hanging in the civic guards' club house for 73 years the painting was...

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