Professional illustrator Steven Stahlberg posted his take on Artificial Intelligence on his Facebook. He provides some history, and his own personal history -- and then, his take on the impact of A.I.
"The Golden Age of illustration was roughly 1880 to 1930, helped along by advances in printing and publishing.  
"In the 1800's the invention of photography began to
 cut into first painters' earnings (it was cheaper and quicker to get a 
family photo), and later illustrators' pay (again, photos were cheaper, 
quicker and more detailed).
"There was a resurgence for illustration, call it a Silver Age, from 1970 to roughly 1995. 
This
 was the age of the highly paid commercial artist.  I was one of them.  I
 was living in Hong Kong at the time, and my average net pay per month 
in the early 90's was around 8000 usd.
"Then in the mid 1990's desktop publishing arrived, and with it stock photo services.  
Basically
 removing all newspaper and magazine work, and most book covers, and 
later also ad work. And what work was left was dirt cheap and needed to 
be finished in hours, not days or weeks. It was a financial disaster for
 me and my family.
"Then came digital art.  Roughly 2000 to today. 
"Around
 the end of the 90's, as I adapted and shifted into digital, I made a 
come-back financially, mostly because I was one of the lucky few who 
made the shift really early on.  
"Then
 the entire rest of the art world slowly and gradually made the same 
shift, and my salary took a nose-dive again.  I like so many others had 
to start hustling on Patreon and similar services just to survive.   
"AI will shrink the market further, at a time when the pool of talented artists grows faster than ever.
"One
 day there will be no money to be made as an artist. But money's not 
important, you say? Not the reason we make art?  If you think that, 
you're either not the one paying your rent, or you're independently 
wealthy.   
"Now everyone's saying, oh but a human is still needed, to be the creator behind the image, just like with photography.  
"They draw the parallel to photography.  "It's just a new tool! And it's so fun to use!"  And yet others discuss copyright.
"You're
 not seeing the problem.  It took hundreds of years from Niepce 
inventing the first permanent photo, to the stock photo services that 
killed traditional illustration.  
"It won't take hundreds of years for AI to mature. And it's not mature yet.  What we see today is a fetus. 
"The
 growth is incredibly fast.  Dalle-E 2 blows Midjourney out of the water
 today.  Who knows what it will do tomorrow?  What about next year - 
Dall-E 3?  4?  What about all the other dozens of AI's in development? 
"Look,
 the trend is clear.  The writing's on the wall.  This is the meteor 
that kills the art-dinos: humans who work full-time as professional 
artists, to support themselves and their families.  
"I
 never wanted to be anything else, I never could have been anything 
else, I'm bad at math, science and sports, from a toddler to 63 I've 
practiced art almost every day. That's approaching 100,000 hours.  Even 
if I had another 100,000 hours to give to another field, what should I 
pick?  I always liked music, but even less money in that, and anyway AI 
will be coming for all creative jobs sooner or later. (And all 
non-creative jobs too.)  Maybe a craft, I always enjoyed 
glass-blowing... 
"Sorry
 not sorry just presenting the problem as I see it, since I see so few 
other people looking at it this way.  I think it's important to identify
 problems. The only solution I can see is Universal Basic Income, or 
UBI, but apparently we can't do that because we're told no one deserves 
to survive unless they work 8 hours a day doing whatever capitalism 
tells them to do. 
"So what's left, Walmart Greeter? No, wait, Walmart eliminated those jobs in 2019."
What's scary is that Steven wrote this on August 12, 2022.  It's new to me. Seeing it for the first time a year later, I can't imagine the leaps and bounds that AI has taken. Pushing a button and creating art and writing instantly doesn't make one an artist or a writer, but corporations that hire already see this as a less expensive, less time-consuming solution to providing content. 
 

 
 
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2 comments:
The BBC recently had an article on the jobs most likely to be affected by AI. Top of the list was Graphic Arts. Have you played with Adobe Exposure? It's free until they hook you. Good bye, graphic designers, illustrators and photographers. Anything that requires intelligence, talent and creativity. This does not mean that AI is creative? No, it's just plagiarism. Yes, artists learn from other artists but they strive to develop a new style of their own. AI just grabs little bits and recreates what someone else has all ready done.
I don't want AI to draw, write stories or play music. I want AI to load the dishwasher and fold the laundry. These were the things we were told it would be doing. Saving humans from redundant work so they could concentrate on creating.
But corporations, American and otherwise, are all about money. Whatever it takes to make more is all that matters. The destruction of civilization doesn't matter has long as the top 1% has more money.
So, what was the last job the BBC says will be taken over by AI? Cleaner. After all, even a Roomba can't dust shelves.
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