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CULTURE

Depardieu behaviour ‘shames France’: culture minister

French actor Gerard Depardieu is under increasing pressure following the release of a new documentary.

French actor Gerard Depardieu is once again in the firing line.
French actor Gerard Depardieu is once again in the firing line. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)

The behaviour of French cinema superstar Gerard Depardieu, charged with rape and facing new scrutiny after sexist comments were broadcast in a television documentary, shames France, the culture minister said on Friday.

Culture Minister Rima Abdul-Malak also said that the Grand Chancery of the Legion of Honour would initiate a “disciplinary procedure” to decide whether to strip Depardieu of the country’s top honour.

Depardieu, 74, was charged with rape in 2020 and has also faced 13 accusations of sexual harassment or assault.

A documentary titled “The Fall of the Ogre” shows the actor on a 2018 trip to North Korea repeatedly making explicit sexual comments in the presence of a female interpreter and sexualising a small girl riding a horse. It was aired last week on France 2 television.

“Directors will decide if he has roles in films in the future or not,” Abdul-Malak told reporters in the southern town of Moissac.

“I don’t think he has many offers arriving now on his desk.”

READ MORE: French film star faces backlash after sexually suggestive comments

She said the comments broadcast in the France 2 report were “absolutely shocking” and she was “disgusted” by his behaviour.

She denounced “an attitude which is intended to be joking and provocative, but is in fact disrespectful and undignified and shames France, because he is a monument of cinema throughout the world.”

‘Disciplinary procedure’

Speaking on France 5, the culture minister indicated the actor might be stripped of the Legion of Honour he received from then president Jacques Chirac in 1996.

“A Legion of Honour distinguishes a man, an artist, an attitude, values,” she said.

“It so happens that I spoke with the Grand Chancellor of the Legion of Honour, General (Francois) Lecointre,” she said, adding that a “disciplinary procedure” would be initiated to decide whether the award should be revoked.

“It will be up to them to decide,” she said. “It’s important to raise this issue.”

At the same time she said the French would not stop watching films featuring Depardieu.

The actor — who has more than 200 titles to his name, including 1990 comedy “Green Card” and Netflix series “Marseille” — has denied any wrongdoing.

“Never ever have I abused a woman,” he wrote in Le Figaro newspaper in October.

The Canadian province of Quebec on Wednesday stripped Depardieu of its top honour over his “scandalous” comments against women in the France 2 report.

French investigators are also looking into the death of an actress who was one of the first to accuse Depardieu of sexual assault, prosecutors said this week.

Several media outlets have reported that Emmanuelle Debever died by suicide aged 60 on December 7, the day the France 2 documentary was aired.

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CULTURE

French art group uses brainwaves and AI to recreate landscapes

The hyper colour image of a dark hill and lava flow is pretty enough -- but its high-tech artificial intelligence origins make it special.

French art group uses brainwaves and AI to recreate landscapes

It is the product of the brainwaves of one member of French art collective Obvious, collected in an MRI machine at the Brain Institute of the Pitie Salpetriere hospital in Paris.

“I was thinking very hard about a volcano,” said Pierre Fautrel, one of the trio.

He admits the resulting work was not exactly what he had in mind, “but it has kept the basic elements: a flaming mountain with flowing lava and a landscape on a light background”.

The trio of thirty-somethings, Fautrel, Hugo Caselles-Dupre and Gauthier Vernier, already gained international attention in 2018 by selling an AI-generated artwork at Christie’s in New York for more than €400,000.

For the latest project, “Mind to Image”, they used an open-source programme, MindEye, which is able to retrieve and reconstruct viewed images from brain activity, combining it with their own AI programme to create artworks.

They tried two different versions — one in which they looked at pictures and tried to replicate them simply through their brainwaves captured in the MRI.

They also tried recreating their invented images based on written descriptions.

For each, they repeated the process many times over 10 hours to create a database for their AI.

Reconstructing ‘imagined’ images

“We’ve known for around 10 years that it’s possible to reconstruct a viewed image from the activity of the visual cortex,” said Alizee Lopez-Persem, a researcher at the Brain Institute.

“But not an ‘imagined’ image — that’s a real challenge.”

It took the team many hours to sort through the data collected in the MRI, before Obvious fed it into their own AI programme, which gives it a specific vibe influenced in part by Surrealism.

“Two years ago, I would never have believed that this could exist,” said Charles Mellerio, a neuro-radiologist who assisted the project.

He credits huge advances in the quality of medical imaging, as well as the sudden emergence of generative AI, which can create images from written prompts.

“There are very real links between art and science,” said Caselles-Dupre, while acknowledging that this technology “can be very scary if used in the wrong way”.

The results of their project will be on display at the Danysz gallery in Paris in October and the group says they want to expand the project to sound and video.

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