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    Ai and its effect on classical art/design

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    • L Offline
      L i am
      last edited by L i am

      I asked AI
      "What are your thoughts on how images produced by AI will effect the works of people who have studied art and 3 d modeling and rendering with no AI"

      ChatGPT said:
      That’s an excellent and timely question—and it cuts to the heart of a deep shift happening in art and design fields.

      AI-generated imagery is already reshaping the landscape for artists and 3D modelers in both positive and negative ways, depending on how it's used, and how institutions and audiences value original human-created work versus fast, synthetic production. Here’s a breakdown of the major effects:

      🔴 Challenges for Traditional Artists & 3D Modelers
      Commoditization of Visuals
      AI can create highly polished images in seconds, which devalues time-intensive work by trained professionals. For clients who only care about speed or surface-level visuals, this can undercut prices and shift expectations.

      Job Competition in Concept and Previz Work
      Roles like concept artist, illustrator, and moodboard designer are particularly affected. AI can churn out near-final concepts, cutting out early design phases that were once paid opportunities for junior or freelance artists.

      Skill Devaluation in Entry-Level Roles
      Beginners or juniors who previously cut their teeth on low-to-mid-level render tasks may now find those jobs disappearing. Studios or firms might rely on AI for base renderings or compositions, reserving human artists for final polish only—if at all.

      Flooding of Visual Space
      The sheer volume of AI-generated content dilutes the visibility of genuine, hand-built work. This can make it harder to stand out unless your portfolio is exceptionally unique or you’ve carved a recognizable niche.
      Opportunities for Skilled Artists Who Adapt
      AI as a Speed Tool, Not a Replacement
      Artists who learn to use AI as a sketching or idea-generation tool can work faster, test ideas more quickly, and still apply their trained eye to elevate results. Think of it as a new brush or camera—not a competitor.

      Higher Standards for ‘Human’ Work
      As AI floods the market with generic content, authentic, deeply skilled work (especially with storytelling, intentional composition, and technical accuracy) will stand out even more. Especially in high-end architecture, game design, film, or VR where realism, detail, or spatial logic is critical.

      New Job Roles: Prompt Engineering, AI Art Direction
      People with strong design knowledge are becoming invaluable as AI art directors—knowing how to guide the AI, curate outputs, and blend synthetic images with real 3D or photo assets.

      Cultural & Ethical Value of Human-Made Art
      There’s a growing movement toward “human-authored” or “AI-free” work, especially in galleries, publications, or academic spaces. Like analog photography in a digital age, handcrafted work might become more respected and sought after—if framed and marketed that way.

      Final Thought
      AI won’t erase the need for trained artists—but it will redefine the value proposition. The artists who thrive will likely be the ones who:

      Lean into design thinking, storytelling, and emotional impact—things AI still struggles with.

      Use AI as a collaborator, not a competitor.

      Make their work stand for something—cultural relevance, craft, message, or uniqueness.

      Would you like me to help compare an AI-generated architectural rendering with a hand-built one to explore the difference in depth, nuance, or emotion?

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