The past wasn't black and white so why should we see him in that color? Fortunately, thanks to artificial intelligence and talented artists, we can look at old pictures in a new way. History comes alive before our eyes!
1.
American physicist Robert Oppenheimer, 1958.
Photographer Philip Halsman.
2.
Girl on the beach, August 1938.
Photographer Armstrong Roberts.
3.
Antietam, Maryland. Lieutenant Colonel Charles B. Norton on the staff of General Fitz-John Porter, September 1862.
Photographer Alexander Gardner.
4.
Bedouin mother, 1948
Photographer Ilo Battigeli.
5.
Karl Marx in 1867.
Photographer Friedrich Karl Wunder.
6.
Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth with Japanese baseball players, Fresno, California, 1927
7.
Ramond L. Roth in Ramscheid, Germany, March 4, 1945.
"I was scared to death," admitted a private from Mogador, Ohio.
8.
Gas station in Redding, California, June 1942.
9.
Titanic survivors Charlotte and Marjorie Collier, 1912.
10.
Amelia Earhart and her plane, 1932
eleven.
Albert Einstein at home in Princeton, New Jersey, 1944
12.
Norwich, Connecticut, 1938-1945.
13.
Noodle delivery man, Tokyo, 1935
14.
Anton Pavlovich Chekhov among relatives and friends in the courtyard of his house on Sadovo-Kudrinskaya Street, spring 1890.
15.
16.
Fridtjof Nansen, 1886
17.
Maria Callas, 1957
Photographer Cecil Beaton
18.
George Armstrong Custer in the uniform of a West Point Academy cadet, 1859
19.
Japanese diplomat Taketomi Toshihiko with his wife, Washington, DC, October 24, 1922.
20.
Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens, circa 1913.
Photographer Karl Bulla.
21.
General William T. Sherman, 1865