Learning Aesthetic Layouts via Visual Guidance
This work provides a computational tool for artists and designers to enhance creativity, though it is incremental as it builds on existing models of human visual attention.
The paper tackles the problem of generating aesthetically pleasing layouts for art and graphic design by learning visual guidance principles from art masterpieces, resulting in a tool that produces multiple layout options in seconds.
We explore computational approaches for visual guidance to aid in creating aesthetically pleasing art and graphic design. Our work complements and builds on previous work that developed models for how humans look at images. Our approach comprises three steps. First, we collected a dataset of art masterpieces and labeled the visual fixations with state-of-art vision models. Second, we clustered the visual guidance templates of the art masterpieces with unsupervised learning. Third, we developed a pipeline using generative adversarial networks to learn the principles of visual guidance and that can produce aesthetically pleasing layouts. We show that the aesthetic visual guidance principles can be learned and integrated into a high-dimensional model and can be queried by the features of graphic elements. We evaluate our approach by generating layouts on various drawings and graphic designs. Moreover, our model considers the color and structure of graphic elements when generating layouts. Consequently, we believe our tool, which generates multiple aesthetic layout options in seconds, can help artists create beautiful art and graphic designs.