Program

Digital Humanities: Digital Humanities Start-Up Grants

Period of Performance

4/1/2009 - 10/31/2011

Funding Totals

$50,000.00 (approved)
$50,000.00 (awarded)


Identifying Regional Design Templates of Ancient Near Eastern Ivory Sculptures of Women Using Computer Technology

FAIN: HD-50650-09

Amy Rebecca Gansell
St. John's University, New York (Queens, NY 11439-9000)

Development of pattern-recognition software that will be tested against ancient Near Eastern ivory sculptures of women.

Our project, the collaboration of an art historian and a mathematician, offers a solution to the regional classification of ancient Near Eastern ivory sculptures of women through cutting-edge machine-learning data analysis techniques. Machine learning is a computer science sub-field that uses algorithms to teach the computer to recognize significant patterns in data. In this project, the patterns we seek are the design templates underlying the production of the sculptures. In addition to solving classification problems, our results might be interpreted to reflect ancient ideals of feminine beauty. And, in the long-term, it is anticipated that our output may serve as a screening tool in forgery identification and could also aid in the physical or digital reconstruction of hundreds of fragmentary and damaged ivory sculptures presently inaccessible in Iraq.





Associated Products

Stylistic clusters and the Syrian/South Syrian tradition of firstmillennium BCE Levantine ivory carving: a machine learning approach (Article)
Title: Stylistic clusters and the Syrian/South Syrian tradition of firstmillennium BCE Levantine ivory carving: a machine learning approach
Author: Amy Gansell
Author: Chris Wiggins
Author: Jan-Willem van de Meent
Author: Sakellarios Zairis
Abstract: Thousands of first-millennium BCE ivory carvings have been excavated from Neo-Assyrian sites in Mesopotamia (primarily Nimrud, Khorsabad, and Arslan Tash), hundreds of miles from their Levantine production contexts. At present, their specific manufacture dates and workshop localities are unknown. Relying on subjective, visual methods, scholars have grappled with their classification and regional attribution for over a century. This study combines visual approaches with machine learning techniques to offer data-driven perspectives on the classification and attribution of this Iron Age corpus. The study sample consists of 162 sculptures of female figures that have been conventionally attributed to three main regional carving traditions: “Phoenician,” “North Syrian,” and “Syrian/South Syrian”. We have developed an algorithm that clusters the ivories based on a combination of descriptive and anthropometric data. The resulting categories, which are based on purely statistical criteria, show good agreement with conventional art historical classifications, while revealing new perspectives, especially with regard to the “Syrian/South Syrian” tradition. Specifically, we have determined that objects of the Syrian/South Syrian tradition might be more closely related to Phoenician objects than to North Syrian objects.We also reconsider the classification of a subset of “Phoenician” objects, and we confirm Syrian/South Syrian stylistic subgroups, the geographic distribution of which might illuminate Neo-Assyrian acquisition networks. Additionally, we have identified the features in our cluster assignments that might be diagnostic of regional traditions. In short, our study both corroborates traditional visual classification methods and demonstrates how machine learning techniques may be employed to retrieve complementary information not accessible through an exclusively visual analysis.
Year: 2014
Access Model: subscription
Format: Journal