Hello instead of showing my projects I decide to write an essay all about AI art work in my opinion.In December 2006, my parents and I traveled to Paris to visit our relatives. I was only ten months old and I don’t remember anything. But my mom has told me that during that trip, we all went to visit the Louvre museum and we all saw the Mona Lisa. I don’t remember seeing it but I know I was there that day. Leonardo da Vinci finished the Mona Lisa painting around 1517 and 489 years later, my mom was able to see this painting and even though I don’t remember, I do know that I was there. Knowing that I was present during that moment makes me feel special. I was in the presence of history. I still can’t believe that I was there and I saw one of da Vinci’s masterpieces. Just like da Vinci, digital artists are also creating their work and their artworks are unique. Artists connect to their artworks emotionally. But the artworks generated by AI cannot reproduce those same emotions. They are machines and they don’t have feelings. This essay shows how artworks generated by AI are harmful for digital artists and soon digital artists will lose their place in the art world.
First, as mentioned above, artists create their work out of nothing. Usually it has a process. They find inspiration through their regular life, through music or anything happening to them in their lives. This is what inspires them to create artwork. It usually tells a story. AI does not have that process and it lacks emotions. Real artists focus a lot on their emotions when creating a piece. In the article titled, “Creation Without Emotion: the Controversies of AI Art,” the author Cathy Chen relates an example where there was a controversy regarding AI in the artworld. In her article she says: In one such controversy, at the last Colorado State Fair’s annual art competition, Jason M. Allen created “Théâtre D’opéra Spatial” with Midjourney, an AI art generator from text prompts, which won first place in the digital category. Many artists argued that this particular example, and the generation of AI art overall, neglects the efforts of ‘real’ artists who craft their own digital pieces. Second, artwork generated by AI come from a data set where artwork of many artists are used without their approval. This is unfair towards artists. They spent a lot of hours working on their projects and it is unfair that AI relies on other real artists work to create anything. Those who are using AI to create art do not ask permission or pay the real artists. Last point, there are social media platforms which are using AI to make more money. For example, the author Chen says: Moreover, AI art brings to light the issue of data protection for personal images uploaded by users themselves. Tiktok has flooded its feed with posts featuring anime faces generated by its AI filter, which turns users’ selfies into digital avatars. Users have even shot their nudes with the AI filter to generate painted landscape pictures. This is a concerning new trend because it is likely that TikTok stores these users’ pictures on their database and owns the rights over those images. TikTok has already been under scrutiny for its data protection policy and users’ privacy may be jeopardised as data is collected and transferred to third parties. This shows that more companies are using AI to make profit and not thinking about the ethical issues around AI. When it comes to AI, it is the big companies against the real artists. Sadly, real artists feel powerless and discouraged. They do not have the money to fight the big companies legally. By writing about this issue and telling their stories online, real artists are hoping to let the public know the danger of AI in our world. In conclusion, this essay shows that AI in the digital world is not good for digital artists. We need more laws to protect the real artists. https://uclpimedia.com/online/creation-without-emotion-controversies-of-ai-art https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Viy3Cu3DLk&t=2s
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For my project I start in January 12 strolling through my phone look at what photos of the background and animals of course. Two of the was the peacock was from Amol Mande from the royalty free image also with the rock it is from dimitrisvetsikas1969.And I then I found some of my photo I download my and along with me of course. What I like about this project is the wildlife and edit it in every detail .What skills I used earlier was masking, magic wand, and filter tools. The easiest part was the masking subjects and look it was real .The hardest part was find the right background ,animals and finding the right place for the animals and me to put in. I learned the skills by a instructions video of how to composite. The tools I used in Photoshop is crop tool is to resize the image to the dimensions for subjects for just the right size for it and the burn tool for add shadows of the animals. The skills I learned was the crop tool and the noise tool for add the shadows to subjects. And what I think the lesson video would be better its has to be more colorful because all I see was black and white. I am looking forward for more projects from Isha Chintaram.
https://pixabay.com/photos/rock-erosion-scenery-landscape-5352025/ https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/selective-focus-shot-of-a-majestic-peacock-couple-perched-together-in-a-park-gm1486023794-511875298?phrase=two+peacocks+photos&searchscope=image%2Cfilm |
AuthorThe views and opinions expressed in this blog are solely those of the author and do not represent those of Chapel Hill HS or Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Archives
March 2024
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