“Being in the crypto, NFT, and Web3 space, I’m always on the hunt for new groundbreaking technologies that’ll change how we live,” Crypto Tea told BuzzFeed.
“I first became fascinated with AI once ChatGPT became public, and being an artist with my own NFT collection, my mind was blown when I found out we could use AI to generate art.”
“I wanted to put AI to the test and see if it could not only pick up features of different people around the world but also cultures—which it did (i.e., the cowboy hat for a woman imagined as the US),” the digital artist explained the origins of the AI countries as humans project.
Crypto Tea is fascinated by the potential for AI art. “I wouldn’t be surprised if the next generation of influencers and content creators would be AI artists,” she said. “Imagine an AI that studies every post on Instagram and knows what gets the best engagement and what people want to hear—the world is changing before our eyes.”
And she’s not the only one who sees it that way. “A year or two back, if you’d asked me whether graphic design was a safe job, I’d have said yes, it was a pretty safe job—anything in the creative industries is a pretty safe job from racing against the machine. But now, actually, I would be somewhat worried if I was a graphic designer,” Toby Walsh, professor of AI at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, told The Syndey Morning Herald.
However, Walsh questions whether or not this is sustainable, both for artists and these programs. If AI-generated work takes money, recognition, and opportunities away from artists, many will be forced to look for other endeavors.
“We have to work out ways to ensure that the people on whose work the systems depend do get some sort of reward so that they continue to produce art that will continue to be used to train future systems.”
Thinking about AI being used to increase the potential of art to broaden what is possible, Walsh said, “I think the best way to envisage artificial intelligence is something that augments us. We’ve always picked up and used tools, and here’s a new tool that will allow many of us to make much more beautiful art than we could without the tool.”
As an example, Walsh pointed out that photography didn’t destroy painting. “Art is more than just making realistic images. It’s about asking questions and addressing aspects of the human condition, whether that’s about falling in love and losing loved ones and human mortality and all of the troubling questions that art helps us to think about,” he explained.
“Machines aren’t going to speak to us in the same way that artists speak to us because they don’t share our humanity.”























