AI is changing the way designers and artists create their work. Artificial Intelligence makes it possible to create images faster, more accurately and efficiently. This revolutionary technology delivers results with complex patterns and nuances that would otherwise be impossible to recreate manually.
AI brings a wide range of benefits to designers. They no longer need to spend hours trying to generate complicated artistic details. AI helps them create complex images with just a few clicks. This can save them time and effort, as well as give them the opportunity to explore new forms of design and creativity.
However, there are some disadvantages that come with using artificial intelligence to create images. Artists need to be aware of these issues when using AI art programs.
What are the downsides of using AI art?
There are a few downsides that anyone using AI must be aware of. For example, its use can result in figures that look too artificial, especially lacking depth and personality.
To get the most out of artificial intelligence, designers should use the best tools. This includes services such as Adobe Creative Cloud, GIMP, Google DeepDream, Clarifai and of course the renowned DALL-E 2. These tools allow designers to improve their work and optimize their final product thanks to the use of AI.
At this moment we are full of support for emerging and local artists, acquiring pieces of great renown is no longer the great mantra and it begins to make more sense in the market a profile that has just come to market with new “visions”. Innovation is what moves the art market, however, as the world and new technologies are advancing, it may seem that some novelties are going to “eat” the traditional way, as is happening with art and artificial intelligences. To understand the debate, the following profiles talk to Culturplaza: on the side of the artists we find the artist Lola Zoido, who has won the award of recognized artist in Abierto València thanks to an exhibition in which she exhibits pieces generated with the help of Artificial Intelligence, the Valencian artist Anisph, who uses this tool to help her get inspired and finally the coordinator of the Playmodes studio, Santi Vilanova, who together with his team generates music through algorithms.
Experts are also part of the story. In the name of art, gallery owner Óscar Segrelles, who was the first in Valencia to host a work in NFT format in his gallery and dared to exhibit a screen as if it were a painting. On behalf of research and science Carles Sierra, director of the Artificial Intelligence Research Institute of the CSIC, president of the European Association of Artificial Intelligence and curator of the exhibition #LaNUBE {IA}, organized by EduCaixa at CaixaForum València. The session opens: What are the dangers and advantages of the use of artificial intelligences in the world of art, can they replace the artist…? And the answer to this question is sought: Are they allies or enemies? In a digital newspaper (but without AIs in control) this conversation is established that could well be reviewed a few years from now, in a future in which some editors may have been replaced by these tools.
To understand the debate, it is first of all necessary to be aware of how far an Artificial Intelligence can go and its possible functions. In its basic definition, AI (short name) is a computer program that serves to perform actions that replicate the ways of human intelligence. Among its actions can be the following: text translation, sentence autocompletion, generation of own essays through content hosted on the network, and can even generate images with concepts that can be found on the Internet. That said, if an artificial intelligence is given the hand it generates the arm, as Sierra explains: “Everything that exists on the network can be created through artificial intelligence, with its interpretation it can generate combinations exploring spaces that no one has reached before. These systems can be understood by artificial intelligence as part of the terrain to be explored”.
In this way, if artists live in the network, intelligence can appropriate their own styles. Pages have already appeared on which artists sell their rights to the artificial intelligence so that it can directly replicate their styles, and there are already profiles that charge for using the exact words they enter in an artificial intelligence to generate a story: “In the end, it’s a question of knowing how to use the tool well, which works by codes. If we ask the application to generate a new Rembrandt painting, it will do it, and it can even add the space around it, but for that you have to know exactly what commands to enter,” Sierra explains.