<p>Online tools that can create wonderful, absurd and sometimes horrifying images using artificial intelligence (AI) have exploded in popularity, sparking soul-searching over the nature of art.</p>.<p>Tech companies tout their inventions as a liberating force of art for all, but purists argue that the artist is still the central cog in the machine.</p>.<p>Art historian and AI expert Emily L. Spratt, whose forthcoming book tackles the ethics and regulation of AI art, told AFP that the art world has not yet found a response to the potentially transformative technology.</p>.<p>Punch a few keywords into an AI art tool -- something like "Brad Pitt in a rowing boat in space in the style of Mondrian" -- and seconds later boldly coloured line drawings will emerge of the Hollywood star, paddling in the stars.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/google-working-on-ai-bot-that-can-churn-out-catchy-music-with-just-text-input-1186000.html" target="_blank">Google working on AI bot that can churn out catchy music with just text input</a></strong></p>.<p>There are plenty of fans of tools like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion and DALL-E 2 who have proclaimed this as the democratisation of art.</p>.<p>But Spratt reckons such tools are more about "entertainment and clickbait" than art.</p>.<p>"It is a way to foster engagement with platforms, which is of course going to help these companies," she said.</p>.<p>"The idea that it is solely a tool of empowerment or that it will democratise the space is overly simplistic -- it's naive."</p>.<p>Rather, she sees the boundary between AI and other technology becoming blurred, pointing to the image manipulation programs already widely used.</p>.<p>"I see the future of AI as being part of the omnipresent background architecture for all digital image-making processes," she said.</p>.<p>"It will be hard to avoid it because it seeps into all of our digital interactions, often unbeknownst to us, especially when we create, edit, or search images."</p>.<p>Beyond the simple online tools that anyone can use, there are plenty of artists labouring over their own algorithms with bespoke datasets.</p>.<p>These works sell for tens of thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands.</p>.<p>A standout practitioner, said Spratt, is German artist Mario Klingemann whose "Hyperdimensional Attraction Series, Bestiary" is a high point of the genre.</p>.<p>"It is a video of seemingly organic forms that morph from one physical entity to another and momentarily appear as recognisable animals," she said.</p>.<p>"Honestly, it's a bit unnerving but it works well as a commentary on the dividing lines between the material and immaterial and the limits of generative AI to replicate the natural world."</p>.<p>She said his art is constantly asking questions about AI as a medium, and more widely about the nature of creativity.</p>.<p>Until relatively recently, there was very little buzz around AI outside of video installations, largely because there was no bank of digital images with clear labels.</p>.<p>Without the source material, there could be no AI art as we know it today.</p>.<p>That changed a decade ago when several projects began to supply huge quantities of digital images, sparking an explosion in creativity.</p>.<p>A French collective called Obvious sold a work for more than $400,000 in 2018 after keenly embracing the idea that the AI "created" the work.</p>.<p>That sale became hugely controversial after it emerged that they had used an algorithm written by artist and programmer Robbie Barrat.</p>.<p>"The reason that the Obvious artwork sold, especially at that price, was largely because it was advertised as the first AI artwork to be offered at a major auction house," said Spratt.</p>.<p>"It was really the art market experimenting with the offering of an AI artwork in step with long-established approaches to the sale of fine art."</p>.<p>At that moment, she said, there was huge interest in bringing together the tech sector and the art world.</p>.<p>But the tech industry has since been hit by a dramatic economic slump and investment and interest have waned.</p>.<p>Major auction houses like Christie's and Sotheby's have since worked hard to create separate platforms for selling AI art.</p>.<p>"It's like they don't want to sully fine art with these new digital explorations," Spratt said.</p>.<p>And critics are yet to catch up with the field and really express what is good, bad or indifferent, she reckoned.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, the AI art discourse is not there yet, but I think it is on its way, and it should come from the field of art history," she insisted.</p>
<p>Online tools that can create wonderful, absurd and sometimes horrifying images using artificial intelligence (AI) have exploded in popularity, sparking soul-searching over the nature of art.</p>.<p>Tech companies tout their inventions as a liberating force of art for all, but purists argue that the artist is still the central cog in the machine.</p>.<p>Art historian and AI expert Emily L. Spratt, whose forthcoming book tackles the ethics and regulation of AI art, told AFP that the art world has not yet found a response to the potentially transformative technology.</p>.<p>Punch a few keywords into an AI art tool -- something like "Brad Pitt in a rowing boat in space in the style of Mondrian" -- and seconds later boldly coloured line drawings will emerge of the Hollywood star, paddling in the stars.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/google-working-on-ai-bot-that-can-churn-out-catchy-music-with-just-text-input-1186000.html" target="_blank">Google working on AI bot that can churn out catchy music with just text input</a></strong></p>.<p>There are plenty of fans of tools like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion and DALL-E 2 who have proclaimed this as the democratisation of art.</p>.<p>But Spratt reckons such tools are more about "entertainment and clickbait" than art.</p>.<p>"It is a way to foster engagement with platforms, which is of course going to help these companies," she said.</p>.<p>"The idea that it is solely a tool of empowerment or that it will democratise the space is overly simplistic -- it's naive."</p>.<p>Rather, she sees the boundary between AI and other technology becoming blurred, pointing to the image manipulation programs already widely used.</p>.<p>"I see the future of AI as being part of the omnipresent background architecture for all digital image-making processes," she said.</p>.<p>"It will be hard to avoid it because it seeps into all of our digital interactions, often unbeknownst to us, especially when we create, edit, or search images."</p>.<p>Beyond the simple online tools that anyone can use, there are plenty of artists labouring over their own algorithms with bespoke datasets.</p>.<p>These works sell for tens of thousands, sometimes hundreds of thousands.</p>.<p>A standout practitioner, said Spratt, is German artist Mario Klingemann whose "Hyperdimensional Attraction Series, Bestiary" is a high point of the genre.</p>.<p>"It is a video of seemingly organic forms that morph from one physical entity to another and momentarily appear as recognisable animals," she said.</p>.<p>"Honestly, it's a bit unnerving but it works well as a commentary on the dividing lines between the material and immaterial and the limits of generative AI to replicate the natural world."</p>.<p>She said his art is constantly asking questions about AI as a medium, and more widely about the nature of creativity.</p>.<p>Until relatively recently, there was very little buzz around AI outside of video installations, largely because there was no bank of digital images with clear labels.</p>.<p>Without the source material, there could be no AI art as we know it today.</p>.<p>That changed a decade ago when several projects began to supply huge quantities of digital images, sparking an explosion in creativity.</p>.<p>A French collective called Obvious sold a work for more than $400,000 in 2018 after keenly embracing the idea that the AI "created" the work.</p>.<p>That sale became hugely controversial after it emerged that they had used an algorithm written by artist and programmer Robbie Barrat.</p>.<p>"The reason that the Obvious artwork sold, especially at that price, was largely because it was advertised as the first AI artwork to be offered at a major auction house," said Spratt.</p>.<p>"It was really the art market experimenting with the offering of an AI artwork in step with long-established approaches to the sale of fine art."</p>.<p>At that moment, she said, there was huge interest in bringing together the tech sector and the art world.</p>.<p>But the tech industry has since been hit by a dramatic economic slump and investment and interest have waned.</p>.<p>Major auction houses like Christie's and Sotheby's have since worked hard to create separate platforms for selling AI art.</p>.<p>"It's like they don't want to sully fine art with these new digital explorations," Spratt said.</p>.<p>And critics are yet to catch up with the field and really express what is good, bad or indifferent, she reckoned.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, the AI art discourse is not there yet, but I think it is on its way, and it should come from the field of art history," she insisted.</p>