A digital museum displaying 240 missing artefacts from 46 countries was launched at the end of September this year at UNESCO’s annual conference on cultural police in Barcelona, Spain. Holding objects restored through artificial intelligence , this AI museum allows visitors to view, learn about and inspect these objects through AI tools in the interface. What’s even more interesting about this museum is that the goal is to have the countries of origin of all these objects reclaim their artefacts in time. It has not been opened for public viewing yet, nor has a date been announced.

The digital visual structure of the museum created by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Fracis Kéré is in the shape of a baobab tree, and holds the Stolen Cultural Objects Gallery, the Auditorium, and the Ret

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