The big idea: Whenever a new tool for making images arrives, people ask the same worried question: is what it makes really art?
They asked it about the camera, about film, about digital paint — and now, loudest of all, about art made by artificial intelligence. Each new machine doesn't just change how art is made; it reopens the question of what art even is.
This micro asks how technology changes both the making of art and the very concept of it — and whether using a machine ever makes something 'less art'.
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The clearest lesson comes from the first machine that terrified artists.
Photography changed what art was for: For centuries a painter's great skill was making a lifelike image. Then the camera did that in a second — perfectly, and endlessly copyable. Many said photography couldn't be art: a machine did the work, and it just copied what was there. Yet two things happened. Photography slowly became an art form; and painting, freed from having to copy reality, ran off toward abstraction and expression. So the machine didn't kill art — it changed what art was for. The lesson: new tools tend to move the boundary of art, not erase it.
Checkpoint — the camera: In one line: a new machine moves the boundary of art rather than ending it — the camera freed painting instead of killing it. Hold that — the newest machine tests it hardest.
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The camera still needed a human at the shutter. The newest tools seem to make the work themselves.
When the machine does the making: With AI-generated art you type a few words and a machine produces a finished image, trained on millions of pictures made by others. Two worries follow. First, the 'less art' worry: if a machine did the making, is there any art here — or just a clever output? Second, the author worry: who made it — the person who typed the words, the coders, or the countless artists whose work trained the machine? Notice this is the camera panic returned, but sharper, because the human seems to have stepped further back from the work.
Go further — higher-level insight: See the pattern across every tool. Each new technology strips away one thing we thought art needed — the camera removed hand-drawing, AI removes even the making — and each time art survives by relocating to what the machine can't do: the choosing, the meaning, the why. So the real question isn't 'is machine-made art?' but 'what part of art is the irreducibly human part?' Framing it that way is a top-band move.
Checkpoint — AI art: In one line: AI art sharpens two old worries — is it art if a machine made it, and whose is it? — by pushing the human further from the work.