-
Asian stocks drop again as rollercoaster week draws to close
-
Venezuela races to search for survivors after quakes kill at least 235
-
Court battle plays out over Wimbledon tennis expansion plan
-
Attack on ship in Hormuz leads UN to halt evacuation plan for trapped sailors
-
List of worst World Cup performances
-
Yoon leads Women's PGA Championship, Korda satisfied with 'solid' start
-
NZ internal report warns of Chinese military forays in Pacific
-
Japan to play Brazil in World Cup knockouts after nervy Sweden draw
-
Dutch march into World Cup knockouts as group winners
-
Better to qualify this way, says Ecuador World Cup hero Plata
-
Ivory Coast see 'no limits' after reaching World Cup knockouts for first time
-
Advocaat 'proud' of Curacao as minnows exit World Cup
-
Germany committed 'tactical suicide', says Nagelsmann
-
Iglesias -- Spanish World Cup striker unafraid to speak out about injustice
-
Quake-hit Venezuela's hospitals care for children left alone
-
Anderson to join Man City from Forest for British record fee: reports
-
Cole grabs PGA Travelers lead with Scheffler one back
-
Ecuador upset Germany to reach World Cup last 32 as Curacao eliminated
-
De Silva century rescues Sri Lanka in first Test
-
Ecuador edge Germany to squeeze into World Cup last 32
-
Pepe steers Ivory Coast into World Cup last 32 as Curacao go home
-
Spain women's star Putellas to join London City Lionesses
-
WNBA suspends Thomas for fist to Clark's throat
-
England showing Premier League edge at World Cup: Eze
-
UK'S King Charles breaks precedent to reveal £30 mn paid in taxes since 2022
-
Nasdaq falls again on mixed day for US stocks, oil prices rise
-
Yoon grabs early Women's PGA Championship lead with Korda in hunt
-
France squad look to do grieving Deschamps proud in final World Cup group game
-
Will Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce wed in New York? Clues abound
-
Mayweather's Athens fight with Zambidis is off: report
-
Lawyer says Vondrousova 'should appeal' against four-year ban
-
Alonso committed to Aston Martin, but keeping options open
-
Hospitals raise alert as heatwave slams Europe
-
Events cancelled, records loom as heatwave reaches Germany
-
'Alligator Alcatraz' detention center shuts in US: official
-
Czech striker Schick ends international career
-
Tennis great Evert says 'relentless' cancer has returned
-
US says wants deal with Iran, but not 'at any price'
-
Colombian president-elect gives armed groups one month to surrender
-
US Supreme Court hands win to Bayer in weedkiller litigation
-
Apple raises prices for MacBooks and iPads, as costs soar over AI
-
Dominant Osaka sails into Bad Homburg semis
-
UK suffers as heat breaks new June record
-
US Supreme Court says asylum seekers can be turned away before border
-
Binance to suspend crypto services in several EU countries
-
Olivia Wilde looks at evolving relationships in 'The Invite'
-
Hamilton reveals neck injury that hampered debut year with Ferrari
-
Rows, drones and 'sorry' Son as South Korea await World Cup fate
-
Noosha Aubel and Dietmar Woidke: How Potsdam Is Letting Down a Young Child with Profound Disabilities
-
Greek families receive keepsakes of Holocaust victims
Is AI the future of art?
To many they are art's next big thing -- digital images of jellyfish pulsing and blurring in a dark pink sea, or dozens of butterflies fusing together into a single organism.
The Argentine artist Sofia Crespo, who created the works with the help of artificial intelligence, is part of the "generative art" movement, where humans create rules for computers which then use algorithms to generate new forms, ideas and patterns.
The field has begun to attract huge interest among art collectors -- and even bigger price tags at auction.
US artist and programmer Robbie Barrat -- a prodigy still only 22 years old -- sold a work called "Nude Portrait#7Frame#64" at Sotheby's in March for £630,000 ($821,000).
That came almost four years after French collective Obvious sold a work at Christie's titled "Edmond de Belamy" -- largely based on Barrat's code -- for $432,500.
- A ballet with machines -
Collector Jason Bailey told AFP that generative art was "like a ballet between humans and machines".
But the nascent scene could already be on the verge of a major shake-up, as tech companies begin to release AI tools that can whip up photo-realistic images in seconds.
Artists in Germany and the United States blazed a trail in computer-generated art during the 1960s.
The V&A museum in London keeps a collection going back more than half a century, one of the key works being a 1968 piece by German artist Georg Nees called "Plastik 1".
Nees used a random number generator to create a geometric design for his sculpture.
- 'Babysitting' computers -
Nowadays, digital artists work with supercomputers and systems known as Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) to create images far more complex than anything Nees could have dreamed of.
GANs are sets of competing AIs –- one generates an image from the instructions it is given, the other acts as a gatekeeper, judging whether the output is accurate.
If it finds fault, it sends the image back for tweaks and the first AI gets back to work for a second try to beat the gamekeeper.
But artists like Crespo and Barrat insist that the artist is still central to the process, even if their working methods are not traditional.
"When I'm working this way, I'm not creating an image. I'm creating a system that can create images," Barrat told AFP.
Crespo said she thought her AI machine would be a true "collaborator", but in reality it is incredibly tough to get even a single line of code to generate satisfactory results.
She said it was more like "babysitting" the machine.
Tech companies are now hoping to bring a slice of this rarefied action to regular consumers.
Google and Open AI are both touting the merits of new tools they say bring photorealism and creativity without the need for coding skills.
- Enter the 'transformers' -
They have replaced GANs with more user-friendly AI models called "transformers" that are adept at converting everyday speech into images.
Google Imagen's webpage is filled with absurdist images generated by instructions such as: "A small cactus wearing a straw hat and neon sunglasses in the Sahara desert."
Open AI boasts that its Dalle-2 tool can offer any scenario in any artistic style from the Flemish masters to Andy Warhol.
Although the arrival of AI has led to fears of humans being replaced by machines in fields from customer care to journalism, artists see the developments more as an opportunity than a threat.
Crespo has tried out Dalle-2 and said it was a "new level in terms of image generation in general" -- though she prefers her GANs.
"I very often don't need a model that is very accurate to generate my work, as I like very much when things look indeterminate and not easily recognisable," she said.
Camille Lenglois of Paris's Pompidou Centre -- Europe's largest collection of contemporary art -- also played down any idea that artists were about to be replaced by machines.
She told AFP that machines did not yet have the "critical and innovative capacity", adding: "The ability to generate realistic images does not make one an artist."
L.E.Campos--PC