jason allen
The Point of No Return is Coming. by Dustin Nguyen
Dustin was the Teen Tech Category Winner of the Bytes and Pieces Writing Contest. When people think of the greatest painters or artists of all time, they may think of legends such as Pablo Picasso, Claude Monet, or Vincent van Gogh. No one would think of or say the name Jason Allen. Jason Allen is a video game designer who submitted his digital art piece Théâtre D'opéra Spatial to the Colorado State Fair's digital arts competition and won first place for his piece. However, this piece was not "his."
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AI generated art - seeing the big picture
Recently, people have become increasingly annoyed about AI-generated art, but perhaps it is being viewed in the wrong way. Many of the disgruntled and angry claim that it is not real art, that it is low effort and merely copies the style of other artists and reuses images. It has been banned from certain fan community groups too: The Guardian reported last week that a Dune subreddit had banned AI-generated art for being'low effort'. In August 2022, an artwork created by Jason Allen using the AI tool Midjourney, titled Théâtre D'opéra Spatial, won first prize in the digital art category at the Colorado State Fair. This has been widely controversial, with people outraged that an AI program could win such a competition.
Artificial intelligence program ignites debate over the nature of art
A piece of digital art that won a prize at the Colorado State Fair has reignited an old furor over what art is and how artists create in an authentic way. Jason Allen used an artificial intelligence program to generate an image titled, "Théâtre D'opéra Spatial," that evokes an opera scene in a science fiction setting. Several Bloomington-Normal artists do not seem to view the debate in an especially sanguinary way. The AI program artist in game designer Allen used doesn't involve any hands-on technique at all. The AI operates by turning words and text into image.
Is using AI to create art cheating?
The role of the artist in creative endeavour has been a much-discussed topic due to recent artwork produced by AI programs such as Midjourney and DALL-E, including a controversial prize winner in Colorado this week. These programs are using artificial intelligence or diffusion machine learning to produce beautiful images. But is it art, and will it put human artists out of a job? Jason Allen's work, Théâtre D'opéra Spatial, created using AI, won a fine art prize in Colorado.Credit:Jason Allen The question "what is art?" has been seminal in the art world for decades. When Australia acquired Blue Poles, critics accused Jackson Pollock of throwing paint at the canvas while drunk.
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An A.I. Beat Human Artists in a Competition. Will It Come for Their Jobs Next?
Last month, a piece of art called Théâtre D'opéra Spatial (that's French for "Space Opera Theater") was entered into the Colorado State Fair's fine art competition by a man named Jason Allen. The piece is a gorgeous "painting" that depicts a giant baroque hall containing three women in flowing red and white robes. The image won first place in the digitally manipulated photography category, and the artist judges at the state fair said the work was the best of the best. At the fair, Allen said the piece was made with Midjourney, an artificial intelligence tool that can create art, but no one really understood what that meant. Once they realized an A.I.-generated piece of art had beaten human artist-created images, a debate opened up.
AI Art Wins Art Competition, Invokes Metaverse, Social Media Melts Down
AI art has caused one of the newest controversies in the aesthetics world. Jason Allen is an American game designer. Constantly knee-deep in code, it was obvious to him that he could generate art using Artificial Intelligence (AI). By using a platform called Midjourney, he created his masterpieces, by telling an AI exactly how he wanted his piece to look. With three favorites, he entered his art into the Colorado State Fair fine arts competition.
La veille de la cybersécurité
Damien Hirst cut a cow and calf each lengthwise into two halves and displayed them in four separate baths of formaldehyde in clear display tanks. The title of the creation, "Mother and Child Divided," is a pun. The cow and calf were cut in two and were displayed physically separated. The macabre bifurcated bovine creation won top place in the 1995 Turner Prize art competition. This simple example reveals that, like judging the palatability of raw oysters, ranking the quality of art is highly subjective.
AI Ethics Left Hanging When AI Wins Art Contest And Human Artists Are Fuming
Where will we draw the line between human-generated art and AI-generated art? If so, should we bestow the acclaimed title of artisan upon said AI? Let's unpack things and see where the world stands on these mind-bending concerns. A crucial undercurrent has to do with AI Ethics and how we as a society perceive and want to make use of AI. For my ongoing and extensive coverage of AI Ethics and Ethical AI, see the link here and the link here, just to name a few. News stories this past few days have made AI and art an extremely hot topic. You see, the whole conundrum about Artificial Intelligence and art was recently thrust into the public eye when an AI "artbot" seemingly won an art contest. The headlines regarding this matter have ranged from fervent outrage to a sense of sorrowful acquiescence that it was only a matter of time before AI would prevail in the creative field of artistry. Some even claim that we've already seen AI comeuppance in art and that there is nothing new in this latest occurrence other than it managed to touch a nerve on social media. Amid all the heated debate in general, there are a lot of facts about this latest incident that muddy the waters and tend to undercut the shallow headlines and vitriolic tweets that the story has generated. It might be useful to take a moment and calmly consider the actual specifics, which I will be doing throughout this discussion. Meanwhile, one perhaps beneficial outcome of the reported story is that AI Ethics managed to suddenly get some long overdue recognition in the media at large. Whenever an AI-themed man-bites-dog story hits the airwaves and goes viral on social media, public opinions start to weigh in. We will examine the various qualms and complaints expressed in the public discourse about this brewing AI Ethics riddle. First, let's lay out the facts of the deemed newsworthy snowball that ultimately started a cantankerous snowfall avalanche. The Colorado State Fair is where the competition in this case took place. The Fair is an annual event that has a hearty 150-year-old tradition initially focused on livestock. An eventual expansion of activities included the inclusion of a fine arts contest.
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Artists are pissed: AI-generated artwork wins first place at competition
Jason Allen used Midjourney to create AI-generated art. It came in first at the Colorado State Fair fine arts competition art competition. The intense reactions were immediate. An AI-Generated Artwork Won First Place at a State Fair Fine Arts Competition, and Artists Are Pissed! Congrats to Sincarnate! Hopefully this can lead to a designated category for AI art? https://t.co/582iA3wyGb