×
Walk With Me: Palace of Versailles lets visitors chat with 20 AI-powered garden statues
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

The Palace of Versailles has launched an AI-powered app that allows visitors to have conversations with 20 statues throughout the palace gardens, including Apollo and Cupid riding on a Sphinx. The innovative experience, powered by Ask Mona, an AI platform, and OpenAI, a leading artificial intelligence company, enables tourists to interact with historical figures in three languages, offering a novel way to explore the palace’s heritage through technology-enhanced storytelling.

How it works: The app uses artificial intelligence to bring statues to life through conversational interactions that reveal historical insights and lesser-known details about Versailles.

  • Visitors can speak with 20 different statues positioned throughout the palace gardens in three languages.
  • “Each exchange reveals anecdotes, historical accounts and often little-known details, enriching our exploration of the gardens and our understanding of Versailles’ heritage,” according to a press statement.
  • The technology is powered by the AI platform Ask Mona in partnership with OpenAI.

What they’re saying: A New York Times reporter observed the app in action, describing how visitors engage with the historical figures.

  • When a teenage boy asked the statue of Cupid, god of love: “Will I ever be rich?” the AI-powered response was: “Ah, becoming rich is an enigma that even my Sphinx is unable to solve! But remember: the source of true riches is, perhaps, love, which subdues all of life’s enigmas.”

Why this matters: The initiative represents a creative application of AI technology in cultural heritage tourism, transforming traditional museum experiences into interactive educational encounters that could inspire similar implementations at historical sites worldwide.

Talking point: visitors to Versailles can now meet the AI Apollo

Recent News

Quick info lookups, practicalities comprise majority of ChatGPT usage

Personal experimentation surges while invisible enterprise integration quietly reshapes American workplaces.

AI data centers use 2.7M gallons of water daily, stressing North Carolina communities

Unlike other utilities, cooling systems evaporate water rather than returning it to ecosystems.