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Posted by _dain_ 2 days ago

Coarse is better(borretti.me)
213 points | 114 commentspage 3
only-one1701 2 days ago|
AI doesn’t make art. The OP is trying to fit the square peg of their intuitive understanding about the art creation process into the round hole of generating it via AI
jellyroll42 2 days ago|
Correct! The process and struggle of creation is a large part of what makes art art. Removing friction from the process makes something artless.
card_zero 2 days ago||
Yes, but: when I was young I used to love photorealism and hyperrealism, which is super-smooth-and-shiny art that conceals its process in order to awe simpletons. Then I bought an airbrush, and then true color computer graphics happened, and soon after that I began to appreciate brush strokes and the texture of pen marks and the idea of the personality of the artist's hand. But that doesn't mean the process-hiding stuff is non-art, or even bad art. What's wrong with creating an amazingly convincing illusion, wasn't that always the goal, historically? Also there are no prizes for effort, and if your artwork is only struggle, I don't want to see it. Unless you're really badass about it.
nehal3m 2 days ago|||
I really like Cory Doctorow’s description of why it feels empty, quote:

“Herein lies the problem with AI art. Just like with a law school letter of reference generated from three bullet points, the prompt given to an AI to produce creative writing or an image is the sum total of the communicative intent infused into the work. The prompter has a big, numinous, irreducible feeling and they want to infuse it into a work in order to materialize versions of that feeling in your mind and mine. When they deliver a single line's worth of description into the prompt box, then – by definition – that's the only part that carries any communicative freight.”

card_zero 2 days ago||
OK, but then there's the possibility of reestablishing the bandwidth by selecting the output. If the artist selects one AI image from hundreds, that's like photography, or collage, or "found sculpture" if you can dig it. Then we can do away with the need for hundreds of versions by saying that the artist selected this image from among all the assorted sights seen during the day to frame as art and present to the viewer, and that's just like picking a preferred version from among hundreds, and thus is just like crafting an image. Tenuously. (This falls apart because the selectivity of the selection isn't good enough, I guess. But the process - throwing away bad ideas as you go along - is just like drawing.)
nehal3m 2 days ago|||
Sort of. It’s like selecting from hundreds of versions of a letter of reference that word the same three bullet points slightly differently. It still feels empty to me, but I guess that’s personal.
card_zero 2 days ago||
I reckon it's not personal, and you and Doctorow are objectively correct, but the explanation isn't great.
goopypoop 1 day ago|||
art without will is like street vomit: it might be pretty but it's just lumps of old content arranged how you'd expect. less than food; more a waste than a triumph. and it always smells the same.

the street vomit photographer is offering a bit more art through his choices but I can already see he makes poor choices

greekrich92 2 days ago|||
Art that takes tremendous effort but looks effortless isn't negated by my comment. The process and struggle is still there.
chrismsimpson 2 days ago||
Is some kind of MoE or routing (but for image models obviously), depending on the prompt ask, a possible solve?
smurda 2 days ago||
Another word for coarse is impasto technique, where the paint is so thick the painting-knife or brush strokes are visible and leave a pronounced texture (e.g. Van Gogh, Rembrandt).

Another cool prompt could be specific painting techniques (e.g. pencil shading, glaze) as if you were training an actual artist in a specific technique.

flir 2 days ago|
Just asked sora for an impasto image of a coca cola bottle. But it still came out looking like a coca cola ad/AI art. Super glossy, slick, meaningless. It didn't look like paint. (And the logo wasn't impasto, which I thought was interesting - I guess that logo's utterly ingrained in the model, it's seen it so many times).
pluralmonad 1 day ago||
Backroom deals to strengthen trademark things. Can't have the brand getting diluted.
effnorwood 1 day ago||
Peanut butter. Agree.
mlinksva 1 day ago||
Good title!
seph-reed 1 day ago||
I had similar feelings with art generation. The early midjourney was definitely impressionistic, and I just kind of like impressionism. It's cool how accurate these have become, but they also feel closer to uncanny or boring.
atoav 1 day ago||
"This is somewhat better, but why is it so drab and colourless? Is the machine trying to make me depressed?"

They asked the machine to produce a picture from a dystopian place and somehow expected the machine to know they like it to be colorful? Just tell the machine it needs to be colorful if that is what you want.

inquirerGeneral 2 days ago||
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CubicLettuce 2 days ago||
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llmsagainagain 2 days ago|
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