cyberdad wrote:
Computers already generate art. Computers can be creative if you give the program scope.
There's a treacherous similarity in yhe word art, denoting both capital A Art and functional or decorative imagery.
I propose to separate these by calling them Art, Design, and Kitsch. The fields overlap, but Art has, over the course of the 20thbcentury, mutated over and over again and is now very hard to define. However, it usually involves some sort of clever insight, and it need not involve images it may well be lacking anything aesthetic, as in: it may not involve an object that can be experienced with the senses (like conceptual art).
AI has no real chance here, on its own, except as a self reflective piece on the creative process. This artwork has already been created and sold, a few years ago - the first painting by a computer. Art critics are not currently looking for more of it, unless it can add something to the Art discourse.
Design is function-oriented, as well as geared towards aesthetics. This is where craftsmanship is involved, where creativity follows a prompt, where the range of possible solutions is already clamped by a presupposed demand.
AI will absolutely year through this industry, where it doesn't matter who the artist is and what he/she thought while maling a piece, where all ot needs to do is fullfill its function as a sketch, a piece of concept art, something for others to work with.
And Kitsch. Kitsch isn't really about elaborate aesthetics, or about function. It's for an audience presumably without the education or intelligence or class for an aesthetic judgement. AI can do that already, actually, most of what it churns out seems to fall under this category. It's the all-greyscale painting with one intensely coloured object to grab your attention, the non-offensive camvas print photo you can buy at ikea, the smallest common denominator. This market has been cornered by stock footage services and instagram for over a decade now, and it only works by producing quantity. It's perfect for AI art.
So, paradoxically, I can only see fine Art surviving this on a large scale, simply because ot has abandoned images as its be all and end all already 6 or 7 decades ago. Or rather it has moved on, from the image as art-work to the image of the artist as it's main product.
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