-------------------------------------------------------------- 30-10-2024 -------------------------------------------------------------- Nobody can truly create something new, I don't think. All art is a product of art that came before it, to some degree. Perhaps not always intentionally, but even to be able to interpret the world around you, there must be some cultural lense that allows you to convert sensory stimuli into meaning. I also think that it's presicely the absence of such a cultural lense that makes the AI "art" we see today feel so soulless. All AI art feels like your unemployed friend going off about how glad they might be that it's finally friday, even though they don't experience that what makes the social bonding experience of celebrating "friday" significant. Historically speaking, art has been a luxury. Human civilization has only been able to create art when other basic needs have been met, hence why we only find art that takes a significant amount of time and resources to create (pottery, tapestries, etc.) in - at its earliest - around places where homo sapiens decided to embrace the practice of animal husbandry. Other civilizations, like the Hadzabe tribe of northern Tanzania didn't have such luxury. The words "Historically speaking" is carrying a lot of weight in my last paragraph, though. I don't mean to imply that art itself is a luxury; neither the creation nor its consumption. Everywhere where there was at least enough food available to free up someone's hands somewhere, art has immediately become the next priority to get to. I think the matter of AI is presenting me with some interesting questsions to think about in regards to art, its consumption and its creation. I genuinely think that everyone has art to share, whether it's merely just the telling of stories about their own unique perspectives in this life we're all wandering though, or to create something more in line with the traditional definition of "capital-A Art" one may infer from the usage of the word on its own. After all, I do believe in "death of the author", thus making the consumption of art into an inherently transformative experience. The consumption of all art, therefore is both a privilege to consumer and artist. Having one's art consumed by someone else an act of priming the firing pin of Chekhov's gun. Sooner or later, your art will be reborn. Possibly in the form of an ode (whether it deserves it or not) or in the form of parody (again, deservedly or otherwise) or something else entirely. I started writing this article feeling a little insecure and overwhelmed by the art I'm privy to consume, not sure how I should go about ever repaying the debt I feel to the artists, or whether that feeling of debt is even justified. But as I went along typing these words on my work laptop while I should probably be replying to emails and closing support tickets, perhaps I have less to worry about than I think. Sources: I basically just read like 3 chapter's of African History of Africa by Zeinab Badawi and then started talking out of my ass with a relatively confident tone. I am a 23 year old kid with half an IT degree; don't trust anything you read on my fucking "gopher phlog" lmao. Badawi's book is good though, you should read it. And I should finish it.