What's your stance on the controversial AI Art that won 1st prize in Colorado?

Kausambi Manjita
27 replies
TL;DR — Someone entered Colorado State Fair fine art competition with an Midjourney-generated piece called Theatre d'Opera Spatial.... and won the first prize! My controversial take: S/he applied in the digital arts category. So why not. What's do you think? Though an AI art generator is legal, there've been copyright lawsuits filed against AI companies. There's also the question of where it is fine to utilise it.. and where it's not. More on this here 👉 https://www.themarysue.com/the-a...

Replies

lasya ganapathi
It's fascinating to see AI-generated art gaining recognition, but the ethical and copyright dimensions certainly make this a complex issue worth discussing further.
Shasheesh Purohit
On one hand, AI-generated art challenges traditional notions of human creativity and craftsmanship. It blurs the lines between human and machine creation, leading to debates about whether AI can truly be considered an artist in its own right. Some argue that the use of AI in art creation diminishes the role of the artist's individuality and emotional connection in the creative process. On the other hand, the recognition of AI-generated art in such competitions highlights the potential of technology to expand artistic boundaries and create new forms of beauty. It opens doors for artists and creators to experiment with tools that can generate novel and unexpected results, pushing the boundaries of artistic innovation.
Sourav Mohanty
In modern times - Manipulation of AI - in terms of articulation, specificity and recurring tests, to get the expected results also can be considered an art. Maybe?. However, apples shouldn't be compared with oranges. There should be a different category where the evaluation can be done under similar conditions - to make it fair.
Apoorva Shukla
On the fence here at the moment, because AI art is certainly fascinating. Maybe a separate category ?
Harsh Kumar
I believe that the intersection of AI and art raises important questions about creativity, authorship, and the role of technology in shaping artistic expression. Controversies often emerge when traditional notions of artistry clash with the innovative possibilities AI offers. It's essential to have ongoing discussions to navigate the complexities of this evolving landscape and consider the implications for both artists and audiences.
Kabir Kohli
I feel a separate category in such competitions makes the most sense especially as prompt engineering continues to evolve, coming up with an excellent prompt can itself be a competition
Ashna S
Pretty interesting! Art & audio manipulation and that intersection between more human forms, is definitely something we won't be able to stay away from anymore. Separate categories?
Yuriy YA
The most terrible fantasies come true.
Edward G
When I think digital art, I think of digital concept art, 3d work, or animation to name a few. At best, it should have its own category.
Brandon
I'm expecting next year it will be the same, only it might be an AI bot applying with no way of knowing there was no human involvement at all.
Jophin Joseph
The Colorado State Fair's own website proudly declares - "And there should be no lagging or hanging back by anybody who has anything worth exhibiting". Their eligibility rules also require a person to declare whether AI generative tools have been used for an exhibit, which I guess the first prize winner would have had to do if they were to be deemed eligible. So under the current set of rules, I consider it a fair judgement. That being said, I don't think it is right to club people art with AI generated art in competitions. It is normal for an artist to be inspired by someone else's work, but most of their creations are products of their imagination. Compared to this, AI generates art purely out of the huge cache of existing artwork that it has at its disposal. In my opinion, that is borderline plagiarism and copyright infringement.
Kausambi Manjita
@ophinjay right now there is no clear boundaries set here I agree.. we dont have fingerprint of which images were used to clone/modify/recreate the new one etc. The world has to catch up to AI
Daniel Burns
Personally, I believe we're about to witness a new leaf turning in the history of art. I enjoy watching artists break boundaries as we go, boundaries that have been defined throughout time due to limitations.
Steve Lou
In the future, artists who are using AI to generate art pieces should explicitly label this to avoid any confusion. Exactly like writers who use AI to generate books or any creator who needs AI to create. As humans, we'll eventually create new categories in contests and competitions to give space to what's really moving to the human eye. In that specific case of the Colorado State Fair, I think that the prize also came as a stance: this is the first person who has extensively used AI to generate something from scratch: kudos for the boldness! It's like Maurizio Cattelan's taped banana: no one actually congratulates him for the number of hours he put to come up with this, simply for the idea's brilliance.
Kausambi Manjita
@steve_lourdessamy +100 - though the overwhelming verdict right now is pure antagonism or fear maybe towards AI .. there has to be some catching up in terms of what's ethical or not - with tech catching up also on how to monitor such ethics.
Magic Mike Paine
Not a fan. Artists should be celebrated, not machines. I think they have there place and will become mainstream and provide huge benefits, but ultimately they need their own category. Celebrate the people that understand how to use it to make beautiful art without taking away from the talented artists.