A new magazine, AI Art Magazine, delves into the world of AI-generated art, featuring curated works and essays that explore the evolving landscape of this transformative art form.
Called simply the AI Art Magazine (perhaps they could have asked an AI to suggest a more creative title), the magazine will be published twice a year as a 'vital chronicle of this transformative moment in art history'. It features AI art chosen by a jury comprising 10 humans and an AI-generated bot called Xiaomi.
The magazine aims to adopt a serious approach to AI art, but it's hard not to think that it may be a parody during the video above, in which Xiaomi, an 'experimental AI designed to analyze and evaluate art through data-driven patterns', interviews the artist and designer. Xiaomi describes the piece as 'a unique combination of fashion and cuisine' before Jan goes on to explain how he experimented with generating images of women in elaborate edible dresses. It feels uncanny: sometimes amusing and sometimes creepy. There's an uncomfortable moment when Xiaomi asks Jan if he would rather his work had been selected by a human judge. As amusing as it is, the interview seems a fitting picture of where AI art is today. We're still not sure about how to treat it, what to say about it or whether to take it seriously at all. And these are questions AI Art Magazine aims to explore. Published by Mike Brauner, the magazine aims to showcase 'remarkable works and accompanying essays that set the benchmark for today’s AI-generated art—from surprising visual experiments to conceptually refined pieces that push the boundaries of this rapidly evolving field'. Inside there's a curated gallery of 50 works, selected by the jury via an international open call. There are the obligatory images of people wearing unusual steampunk headgear, and jury members have written essays to accompany some of the pieces
AI ART ART MAGAZINE ART HISTORY TECHNOLOGY FUTURE OF ART
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