this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2024
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I disagree with this sentiment; I'm inclined to believe that AI has actually lowered the bar for meaning.
Before AI, typically only skilled artists drew pictures for the web. But now that AI is making art that's less meaningful than crayon pictures, there's the growing sentiment of
which could actually mean more people have the ability to go on and artify.
Of course this is anecdotal; it's the reason I started drawing again :)
This is selective memory at best. There's a lot of so-called art by real humans and text wishes that are way way worse than what OpenAI's algorithms produce.
I'm not sure I agree but I'm happy to discuss! :)
Why are you calling my statement "selective memory" (am I intentionally excluding something?), and what do you mean by "way worse"? Do you consider unskilled art as not art at all (i.e. "so-called")?
What I was trying to say, is that on social media, skilled artists formerly dominated attention (likes, upvotes) because viewers wanted well-constructed, pleasing-to-the-eye artwork. I wasn't trying to say that they were the only art posters (sorry for my wording!). Continuing, now that AI is in the arena, "technically-decent" art is no longer the lower bound for pleasurable-to-see -- now, viewers are more partial to knowing that a human was vulnerable when they expressed themselves with art.
It's an intensification of internet-ugly aesthetic, which Douglas (2014) called "an imposition of messy humanity upon an online world of smooth gradients, blemish correcting Photoshop, and AutoCorrect” (p. 314). Now, online, handmaking art at all is a declaration of humanity, because you could corporately fake something full-colored and intricate, but arguably soulless, with lower effort.
Of course, I'll try to take it from your perspective. I've seen really bad human art (I like art!), and I've seen less-artifacted AI art (have you ever seen Even_Adder's generations on lemmy.dbzer0? they don't have the overshading issue at all). Of course, some may disagree that the latter is art (is art only human expression?), but supposing I do consider the latter art, my point still stands -- viewers are more on the lookout for genuineness now.
Happy to see what you think!
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