Perhaps, in the not so distant future, this will be how we tell original person created art from AI content. Any nudity will identify the piece as art created by a human. This also calls into question the topic of attribution. Should art, or for that matter text or other works, created by AI, be labelled as such? Should we know when we are reading or viewing work by an AI source rather than a person?
I'm not a big Ayn Rand fan, but she said a couple or three good things. One was that the way artists portray the human body betrays what culture thinks humans are. (I always imagine she was complaining about de Kooning.) Kenneth Clark pointed something out about the nude in art: "The nude does not simply represent the body, but relates it, by analogy, to all structures that have become part of our imaginative experience." You put those two ideas together with the alienation from nature represented by our alienation from our naked bodies, and you get a perverse and destructive mass "imaginative experience" that goes way beyond the images you censor.
This is perfect example of the old coding maxim bad input = bad output.
Perhaps, in the not so distant future, this will be how we tell original person created art from AI content. Any nudity will identify the piece as art created by a human. This also calls into question the topic of attribution. Should art, or for that matter text or other works, created by AI, be labelled as such? Should we know when we are reading or viewing work by an AI source rather than a person?
I'm not a big Ayn Rand fan, but she said a couple or three good things. One was that the way artists portray the human body betrays what culture thinks humans are. (I always imagine she was complaining about de Kooning.) Kenneth Clark pointed something out about the nude in art: "The nude does not simply represent the body, but relates it, by analogy, to all structures that have become part of our imaginative experience." You put those two ideas together with the alienation from nature represented by our alienation from our naked bodies, and you get a perverse and destructive mass "imaginative experience" that goes way beyond the images you censor.