It's not entirely off topic, since by their nature generative AIs, trained on existing works, are best at creating conventional, existing art. One thing humans can do is surprise.Raphael wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 4:17 am If you forgive me a little off topic diversion, by the standards of today's art theorists, art is only art if it challenges or questions society's or the viewer's assumptions, so, if you really take that standard seriously, the vast majority of periods in human history didn't produce any art, because the kind of art-like stuff produced during those periods didn't have that intention.
I'd contest the art theorists, precisely because much of history would disagree. Perhaps the classic example is ancient Egyptian art, which was purposely kept almost the same for three thousand years.
Human art is going to continue because humans want to express what it means to be human. AIs can imitate their past work, which means they can only express what it meant to be human. (And FWIW, not in any authentic way. The article I posted is worth reading for the artist Ilzo's excellent response to why the AI guys' favorite AI painting was actually not good at all.)
AI impresses non-artists like malloc because it puts lots of details in. But it doesn't know what the details mean and makes a hash out of them. A little randomness can be good in art, but when everything is random it's not actually well thought out.)