Sunday 4 September 2022

All The Fun Of The Despair [AI Art Generation]

Working with an art generation AI, at least one that is freely available on Google Play Store but in crippleware form, is strangely like rubbing a lamp and coming face to face with a genie who informs you in booming, mystical voice "You may have five wishes per day. To unlock unlimited wishes, subscribe to Genie Pro. Also some categories of wish may require in-app payments."

The striking and not-at-all-contrived similarites do not end there. As with making wishes for genies, at least in my experience, when making up prompts for art AIs the wording matters - and it's hard to know what words or phrases will make a difference, let alone what will lead to a result close to your actual wish. As with genies, always assume that the art AI wil interpret your wish in the most unhelpful way possible, so try not to give wiggle room. You could of course experiment with hundreds of alternative phrases but then you would need to pay the subscription fees or risk running out of wishes too quickly.

"Artists staring sadly into the abyss"

Sci-Fi Gene (with minor assistance from Wonder AI), 2022

Digital

On the other hand, if you are willing to perservere, then at least sometimes your wishes really can come true. At least if your wishes are to see medieval cities made out of cheese.

"Busy medieval city made of cheese"

Sci-Fi Gene (with minor assistance from Wonder AI), 2022

Digital

I asked Wonder AI to come up with posters for some of my films, using the titles as prompts and the Cinematic AI. The results are... interesting.

"Last Zombie Standing" - does indeed feature one standing zombie and has created a decently creepy atmosphere, or at least has bunged some gaslamps around the place. Other zombies are present but one is sitting on a ledge and one is leaning on a wall so neither are technically standing. Wonder AI has delivered on the brief and I would have been happy to use this poster.
"We Can Get You Some Really Cheap Gear" is not at first glance a film about camera equipment at all - it's a lighthearted (but adult) LEGO-animated comedy about a top-secret experimental drug that allows a failing writer to access 1% of his brain.

But AI is more powerful and more insightful than you might think. Wonder AI has correctly deduced that my film is in fact a sharp and unapologetic satirical deconstruction of the entire film industry, taking particular aim at the two most over-used cinematic techniques of all - foreshadowing and the focus pull. As an auteur it's nice to be understood once in a while.

Meanwhile my over-long title has nothing at all to do with drugs: it's a reference to the regular and highly delusional claim made by Kino London club organizers that they could, through their extensive industry contacts, score cheap equipment for filmmakers. And indeed, were you to take them up on their offer you could well end up with something like the device featured in the poster.

"Steampunk Girl" while I cannot fault Len Peralta's original artwork for John Anealio's song, which appears in the final reveal at the end of my lyric video, this image comes a close second. I was particularly impressed to see that Wonder AI has perfectly captured the steampunk vibe without hypersexualizing the image, and without resorting to the most obvious genre tropes: no brass goggles, and not a single cogwheel. What happened to Steampunk Girl's left arm is a question to be answered in the prequel.

You can watch all three films on my Short Films page here.

Saturday 3 September 2022

Real life sci-fi: portrait of the artist as an AI [AI Art Generation]

 The Sci-Fi Gene occasionally pauses to observe respectfully the evolutionary progress of our future overlords and masters as we approach the inevitable singularity. It seems that, while we were metaphorically sleeping, an Artificial Intelligence-generated image was entered into an art competition in Colorado and won first prize, to the annoyance of some human artists and commentators.



The picture, Théâtre D'opéra Spatial was produced by Jason Allen by sending an unspecified prompt to the art generation AI Midjourney. You can read more about the picture and the online reaction at VICE here.

Personally I'm not sure what the fuss is about. All the AI did was produce a detailed and evocative picture in classical style with powerful composition and lighting, layers of possible meaning and symbolism and an emotional kick. It's not like it taped a banana to a wall or anything.

As far as I can understand, AI artists work by analysing large numbers of images, breaking down the details in the images and deducing rules about the way those details go together, then using those rules to create new images. (Of course this is completely different from art students learning by studying great masterpieces.) A consequence of this process is that it seems to produce Impressionist works. For example here are two responses to my prompt "Renaissance woman with mysterious smile" by the AI Wonder and, for comparison, a little-known work by a human artist on a similar theme.

From a distance, the AI images look convincing enough. It's probably a good idea not to count the fingers too carefully, look too closely into their eyes, or speculate too deeply on exactly what lies behind their expressions. In all three cases perhaps it would be better not to know.