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  • Sorry, but I've seen this opinion expressed very often, though not word-for-word. Definitely not unpopular overall.

    I don't disagree, though I would argue that AI art can never have the same importance as art directly generated by a human using their full set of abilities.

  • Kudos op for a very unpopular opinion (at least on Lemmy).

    I'd add that people trying to gatekeep what is and isn't art are missing the whole entire point of it. I get the same vibe about AI art on Lemmy as when boomers criticize modern art on Facebook.

    Any group that adds quotes around the word art (as in AI "art" or performance "art") instantly loses any legitimacy on the subject. They're virgins discussing sex acts.

  • I suppose it would depend on who the "artist" is considered to be at the end.

    Say for instance I had an idea that I wanted a painting of Sir Issac Newton wearing a cowboy hat and riding a mechanical bull, and I commission a painter to create my vision. Instead of using paints or pencils or anything to create the image the painter goes online and downloads a bunch of pictures of Isaac Newton and mechanical bulls and collages them together in a way that looks kind of like an original painting.

    Who is the artist in that case? It's not me, since I didn't make anything. It's not the painter since they didn't actually create anything original, they just stole a bunch of pictures someone else took. It's not the people who made the original images that the painter stole since they never even agreed to be part of any of it.

    We hit the same dilemma with AI. The person putting in the prompts hasn't really "created" anything. The AI engine hasn't created anything either, it just takes parts of other existing works. The people who made the original works had no say in any of how their work was used.

    How is that "art"?

    I love playing with AI to make silly images or even workshop ideas for things I might do in the future, but I wouldn't call it "art"

45 comments