• @Cysioland
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    1 year ago

    Some of this backlash might definitely be just artists/developers afraid of competition. But it’d be interesting to see how the space develops.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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      21 year ago

      Same, I kind of see AI art generation to be akin to photography. A photographer doesn’t create the scene, they merely have an eye for capturing it. It could be argued that someone generating images using a machine learning algorithm and getting the algorithm to produce a picture they find interesting is essentially doing the same task.

      I do see this becoming a tool for artists as well. For example, it’s possible to give stable diffusion a sketch and have it fill in details in the sketch using prompts. This saves a lot of manual work for the artist. The artist can then build on this. This can also be used as a prompt for ideas where you’d generate a bunch of pictures and then use one as inspiration for a picture of your own.

      As I see it, the real question is what role we think mechanical skill plays in creation of art. For example, modern tools like Krita make it much easier for artists to produce intricate effects than a traditional medium. It takes far more skill to paint with oil on canvas than to produce digital art. Does it mean that makes a picture painted using digital tools somehow lesser or is it the vision of the artist that ultimately matters. And if we agree that it comes down to the vision and the ideas or feelings the artists aims to convey then the medium should not matter.

      Furthermore, the observer imparts their own meaning on the art. When I look at a picture, it’s either meaningful to me or not. It hardly matters whether it was produced by an algorithm or by a person. In most cases I have no idea what the artist was thinking when they painted a picture, so any meaning I ascribe to it comes solely from me.