PARIS, June 13 — To many they are art’s next big thing — digital images of jellyfish pulsing and blurring in a dark pink sea, or dozens of butterflies fusing together into a single organism.
But the nascent scene could already be on the verge of a major shake-up, as tech companies begin to release AI tools that can whip up photo-realistic images in seconds.The V&A museum in London keeps a collection going back more than half a century, one of the key works being a 1968 piece by German artist Georg Nees calledArgentinian artist Sofia Crespo poses for a photo at her home in Lisbon on June 8, 2022.
But artists like Crespo and Barrat insist that the artist is still central to the process, even if their working methods are not traditional. Google and Open AI are both touting the merits of new tools they say bring photorealism and creativity without the need for coding skills.They have replaced GANs with more user-friendly AI models called “transformers” that are adept at converting everyday speech into images.
Although the arrival of AI has led to fears of humans being replaced by machines in fields from customer care to journalism, artists see the developments more as an opportunity than a threat.
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