56 Amazing Colorized Photos From the Past

The ethical dimensions of artificial intelligence (AI) image colorization were recently brought to public attention when several historical images were altered using digital algorithms.

Irish artist Matt Loughrey digitally colorized and added smiles to photos of tortured prisoners from Security Prison 21 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, which was used by the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to ’79. His photos were published in Vice and prompted outrage on Twitter.

Vice removed the altered photos from their website and apologized to the families of the victims and the communities in Cambodia. Meanwhile, the Toronto Star’s Heather Mallick described them as “thoughtless, ahistorical and self-congratulatory” and proclaimed that we must stop trusting photography.

AI colorization refers to the use of digital algorithms to substitute colors into a black-and-white photograph by making an “informed guess” based on the grayscale root.

When data scientist Samuel Goree tested DeOldify, an AI colorization app, to convert a grayscale copy of Alfred T. Palmer’s 1943 photograph Operating a hand drill at Vultee Nashville, the result produced an image in which the black female subject’s skin was lighter.

Interventions like these are not unique among the history of photographic manipulation—the Cottingley Fairies photographs taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths in 1917 are a prime example. But alongside sophisticated internet tools such as deepfakes (where a person in an existing image or video is replaced with someone else), the use of algorithms to alter photographs has provoked renewed anxiety about the authenticity of photography in the digital era.

As a researcher of film and visual culture, I am interested in exploring the convictions behind controversies like these by looking at them through the history of image manipulation. The use of colorization to create revisionist histories of atrocity and synthetic skin tones is concerning, but it does not mark the first time colorization has caused controversy.

COLORS OF BENETTON CONTROVERSY
In 1992, the clothing brand United Colors of Benetton sparked outrage when it repurposed a colorized photograph of David Kirby, who had just died of AIDS-related complications, and his family for its advertising campaign.

“The face of AIDS” was the name given to the photo in the iconic spread in LIFE magazine. Photographs like these were meant, in part, to encourage sympathy and relatability towards sufferers of the most stigmatized illness around.

When the black-and-white photo was selected for Benetton’s ad campaign, executives made the decision to colorize it. This was done using a technique that was developed during the early years of photographic production called hand-coloring that required setting pigment down on the image and removing it with cotton around a toothpick.

The two issues that galvanize this strange campaign are its realism and its dignity.

PROBLEMS WITH COLORIZATION
Opposition to colorization often points to the artifice of the practice, but for the Benetton executives the problem with the Kirby photograph was not that it looked too real, but that its realism seemed incomplete.

The colorist, Ann Rhoney, described it as creating an “oil painting,” and the act of making a photograph more real by turning it into a painting appears to reverse longstanding assumptions about the art practices that are closest to reality.

However, Rhoney’s self-stated objective was not to make the photograph more real, but to both “capture and create Kirby’s dignity.” Kirby’s father supported the effort, while gay rights organizations called for a boycott of Benetton.

Marina Amaral, a Photoshop colorist working to colorize registration photos from Auschwitz for Faces of Auschwitz, claims her work helps to restore the victims’ “dignity and humanity,” while Cambodia’s culture ministry said Loughrey’s images affected “the dignity of the victims.”

Disagreements about dignity tend to mirror those about photography and colorization: For some, dignity is inherent to an original, for others, dignity is something you add.

And the examples are abundant. Peter Jackson’s decision to colorize historical footage from the First World War for his 2018 film They Shall Not Grow Old drew criticism from historian Luke McKernan for making “the past record all the more distant for rejecting what is honest about it.” The YouTube channel Neural Love has faced resistance to its “upscaling” of historical footage using neural networks and algorithms.
Colorization became routinely controversial in the 1980s when computers replaced hand colorists and studios began colorizing a host of classic films to appeal to larger audiences. Objections to the practice ranged from poor quality, the commercial forces behind the practice, and the omission of the qualities of black and white, to the implicit contempt for artists’ visions, a preference for the originals, and a disregard for history.

Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert famously called the practice “Hollywood’s New Vandalism.” Philosopher Yuriko Saito suggested that disagreements over the value of colorization often turn on an implicit belief in whether a work of art belongs to the artist or to the public.

In the context of historical images, the question becomes: to whom does history belong?

Photographs contribute to our development as moral and ethical subjects. They allow us to see the world from a point of view that does not belong to us, and alterations that make photography and film more familiar and relatable complicate a primary role we have given it as “a vehicle for overcoming our egocentricity.”

PHOTOGRAPHY AND AI
The recent controversies around image colorization point to the similarities between photography and AI. Both are imagined to create representations of the world using the least amount of human intervention. Mechanical and robotic, they satisfy a human desire to interact with the world in a non-humanized way, or to see the world as it would look from outside ourselves, even though we know such images are mediated.

What is fascinating about new techniques of colorization is that they can be understood as photography seeing its own image through AI algorithms. DeOldify is photography taking a photograph of itself. The algorithm creates its own automatic representation of the photograph, which was our first attempt to see the world transparently.

With the increasing accessibility of tools for colorizing photographs and making other alterations, we are re-negotiating the very difficulties first brought about with photography. Our desire for and disagreements about authenticity, mechanization, knowledge, and dignity are reflected in these debates.

The algorithm has become a new way of capturing reality automatically, and it demands a heightened ethical engagement with photos. Controversies around colorization reflect our desire to destroy, repair, and dignify. We don’t yet know what a photograph can do, but we will continue to find out.

Text by Roshaya Rodness

Albert Einstein, 1921.
Madison Square Park New York City around 1900.
Marilyn Monroe.
Samurai Training 1860.
Poet Walt Whitman, 1868.
Hindenburg crash, 1937.
British Soldiers Returning from the front in 1939.
Joan Crawford on the set of Letty Lynton, 1932.
Country store in July 1939. Gordonton, North Carolina.
Mark Twain in 1900.
Claude Monet in 1923.
Jimmy Stewart.
Pablo Picasso.
Lou Gehrig, July 4, 1939. Photo taken right after his famous retirement speech. He would pass away just two years later from ALS.
Lee Harvey Oswald, 1963, being transported to questioning before his murder trial for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Helen Keller meeting comedian Charlie Chaplin in 1918.
Girls delivering ice, 1918.
Burger Flipper 1938.
Winston Churchill, 1941.
Albert Einstein on a Long Island beach in 1939.
Audrey Hepburn.
Union Soldiers taking a break 1863.
Charles Darwin.
WWII soldiers sending Easter gift to Hitler.
W.H. Murphy testing the bulletproof vest in 1923.
Theodore Roosevelt.
Robert E. Lee a week after surrendering at Appomattox
Allan Pinkerton, President Lincoln, and Maj. Gen. John A. McClernand at Antietam.
Kissing the War Goodbye, 1945
Harry Houdini steps into a crate at New York Harbor as part of an escape stunt, July 7, 1912.
Clint Eastwood checks his gun at home on June 1, 1956 in Los Angeles, California.
Charlie Chaplin, 1914
Boys buying flowers, 1908
Baltimore Slums, 1938.
Drought-stricken farmer and his family near Muskogee, Oklahoma, 1939.
Sigmund Freud in 1921.
A car crash in Washington D.C., 1921.
Louis Armstrong plays to his wife, Lucille, in Cairo, Egypt in 1961.
Henry Ford, 1919.
An RAF pilot getting a haircut between missions while reading a book.
Sophia Loren and Jayne Mansfield.
Australian mugshots from the New South Wales Police Dept in the 1920s.
Babe Ruth’s MLB debut in 1920.
Brooklyn Bridge, 1904.
A Washington, D.C. gas station in 1924.
Performer Sarah Vaughan, 1946.
18-year-old Russian girl after liberation from Dachau in April 1945
The founder and president of the Limited Suffrage Society, Mary Winsor, holding a sign during the American suffrage movement in the early 1900s.
Licking blocks of ice during New York City’s 1912 heat wave.
Three soldiers on the watch for the enemy in a rubble-filled building in France in 1917.
Soccer legend Pele in Sao Paulo, 1958.
Jewish women and children arriving at the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp in 1944.
A small child with a puppy in Pleasant Point, West Virginia in May 1943.
Soldiers donning war paint in 1944.
Unemployed men outside Al Capone’s soup kitchen during the Great Depression.

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