Lagaya wrote:As an artist, a painter, this is close to home. The work of human artists has been used to train art bots, without recognition or recompense to the human artists. And now there are human would-be-artists, who lack the skills to create a powerful image on their own, prompting the bots to create images that the human would-be artists want to claim as their own. It's a joke. It's just prompt-craft. It's not art. I can most often pick the fakes. But the bots will get better. So what are we human artists supposed to do. Just throw in the towel and become expert prompt-crafters? This is crazy! I can only hope that there will always be a market for original human created art that is born out of the struggle to get paint on canvas to mean something to other humans. The is the texture of paint on canvas, the brushwork, the drawing, the composition... But with 3D printing even that faint hope may be forlorn. I'm so old now that my retirement career as a painter is probably reaching it's expiry date. But what about the future of art?
Who knows. Maybe the bots will exceed us in all fields. If so, what will we become? Might we become just expendable bags of biology?
Lagaya, I was a data analyst and a drummer. So I was made redundant long ago, which you are only now facing. Since then I've done material with the help of machines and without. Hilariously, when I listen back, most of the best music I recorded had drum machines helping out. There's a good reason I never made a living from drumming
It's great being old enough to admit things like that.
I don't like AI art. Many musicians are using them for album covers. There's a quality about the images that, weirdly, makes me feel a little queasy. It appears that my digestive system can tell the difference. How rootsy is that? haha. I think it's the way AI "artists" blend the different elements of an image - everything seems to blend into everything else in the same way. The unbearable blandness of the uncanny valley.
Still, AI (or drum machines) are tools - like paint brushes and drum kits. In time, AI will create art that would be impossible for humans. Artists became programmers and programmers became prompt-crafters because of the increasing potency of the tools.
I expect the bots to exceed us in the same way as secular people exceeded the religious, and religious people exceeded the tribal, and tribal people exceeded other species. With each advancement, another baby is tossed out with the bathwater, so to speak. The situation is the same as in our own growth - the children we used to be were cuter, more energetic, more flexible, more enthusiastic etc than the adults we became. Growth happens, but there's always something lost along the way. That is the way of The Ouroboros.