This year, the Colorado State Fair’s
annual art competition gave out prizes in all the usual categories: painting,
quilting, and sculpture.
But one entrant, Jason M. Allen of Pueblo West,
Colorado, did not make his entry with a brush or a lump of clay. He created it
with Midjourney, an artificial intelligence (AI) program that turns lines of
text into hyper-realistic graphics.
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Allen’s work, “Théâtre D’opéra Spatial,” took home
the blue ribbon in the fair’s contest for emerging digital artists — making it
one of the first AI-generated pieces to win such a prize and setting off a
fierce backlash from artists who accused him of, essentially, cheating.
Reached by phone Wednesday, Allen defended his work.
He said that he had made clear that his work — which was submitted under the
name “Jason M. Allen via Midjourney” — was created using AI and that he hadn’t
deceived anyone about its origins.
“I’m not going to apologize for it,” he said. “I
won, and I didn’t break any rules.”
AI-generated art has been around for years. But
tools released this year — with names like DALL-E 2, Midjourney, and Stable
Diffusion — have made it possible for rank amateurs to create complex, abstract
or photorealistic works simply by typing a few words into a text box.
These apps have made many human artists
understandably nervous about their own futures; why would anyone pay for art,
they wonder, when they could generate it themselves? They have also generated
fierce debates about the ethics of AI-generated art, and opposition from people
who claim that these apps are essentially a high-tech form of plagiarism.
Allen, 39, began experimenting with AI-generated art
this year. He runs a studio, Incarnate Games, which makes tabletop games, and
he was curious how the new breed of AI image generators would compare with the
human artists whose works he commissioned.
This summer, he got invited to a Discord chat server
where people were testing Midjourney, which uses a complex process known as
“diffusion” to turn text into custom images. Users type a series of words in a
message to Midjourney; the bot spits back an image seconds later.
Eventually, Allen got the idea to submit one of his
Midjourney creations to the Colorado State Fair, which had a division for
“digital art/digitally manipulated photography.” He had a local shop print the
image on canvas and submitted it to the judges.
“The fair was coming up,” he said, “and I thought:
How wonderful would it be to demonstrate to people how great this art is?”
Several weeks later, while walking the fairground in
Pueblo, Allen saw a blue ribbon hanging next to his piece. He had won the division,
along with a $300 prize.
“I couldn’t believe it,” he said. “I felt like: This
is exactly what I set out to accomplish.”
After his win, Allen posted a photo of his prize
work to the Midjourney Discord chat. It made its way to Twitter, where it sparked
a furious backlash.
“We’re watching the death of artistry unfold right
before our eyes,” one Twitter user wrote.
Some artists defended Allen, saying that using AI to
create a piece was no different from using Photoshop or other digital
image-manipulation tools and that human creativity is still required to come up
with the right prompts to generate an award-winning piece.
Olga Robak, a spokesperson for the Colorado
Department of Agriculture, which oversees the state fair, said Allen had
adequately disclosed Midjourney’s involvement when submitting his piece; the
category’s rules allow any “artistic practice that uses digital technology as
part of the creative or presentation process.” The two category judges did not
know that Midjourney was an AI program, she said, but both subsequently told
her that they would have awarded Allen the top prize even if they had.
Controversy over new art-making technologies is
nothing new. Many painters recoiled at the invention of the camera, which they
saw as a debasement of human artistry. (Charles Baudelaire, the 19th-century
French poet and art critic, called photography “art’s most mortal enemy.”) In
the 20th century, digital editing tools and computer-assisted design programs
were similarly dismissed by purists for requiring too little skill of their
human collaborators.
What makes the new breed of AI tools different, some
critics believe, is not just that they’re capable of producing beautiful works
of art with minimal effort. It’s how they work. Apps like DALL-E 2 and
Midjourney are built by scraping millions of images from the open web, then
teaching algorithms to recognize patterns and relationships in those images and
generate new ones in the same style. That means that artists who upload their
works to the internet may be unwittingly helping to train their algorithmic
competitors.
“What makes this AI different is that it’s
explicitly trained on current working artists,” RJ Palmer, a digital artist,
tweeted last month. “This thing wants our jobs, its actively anti-artist.”
Even some who are impressed by AI-generated art have
concerns about how it’s being made. Andy Baio, a technologist and writer, wrote
in a recent essay that DALL-E 2, perhaps the buzziest AI image generator on the
market, was “borderline magic in what it’s capable of conjuring, but raises so
many ethical questions, it’s hard to keep track of them all.”
Allen, the blue-ribbon winner, said he empathized
with artists who were scared that AI tools would put them out of work. But he
said their anger should be directed not at individuals who use DALL-E 2 or
Midjourney to make art but at companies that choose to replace human artists
with AI tools.
“It shouldn’t be an indictment of the technology
itself,” he said. “The ethics isn’t in the technology. It’s in the people.”
And he urged artists to overcome their objections to
AI, even if only as a coping strategy.
“This isn’t going to stop,” Allen said. “Art is dead, dude.
It’s over. AI won. Humans lost.”
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