This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (2024)

Those cool AI-generated images you’ve seen across the internet? There’s a good chance they are based on the works of Greg Rutkowski.

Rutkowski is a Polish digital artist who uses classical painting styles to create dreamy fantasy landscapes. He has made illustrations for games such as Sony’s Horizon Forbidden West, Ubisoft’s Anno, Dungeons & Dragons, and Magic: The Gathering. And he’s become a sudden hit in the new world of text-to-image AI generation.

His distinctive style is now one of the most commonly used prompts in the new open-source AI art generator Stable Diffusion, which was launched late last month. The tool, along with other popular image-generation AI models, allows anyone to create impressive images based on text prompts.

For example, type in “Wizard with sword and a glowing orb of magic fire fights a fierce dragon Greg Rutkowski,” and the system will produce something that looks not a million miles away from works in Rutkowski’s style.

But these open-source programs are built by scraping images from the internet, often without permission and proper attribution to artists. As a result, they are raising tricky questions about ethics and copyright. And artists like Rutkowski have had enough.

According to the website Lexica, which tracks over 10 million images and prompts generated by Stable Diffusion, Rutkowski’s name has been used as a prompt around 93,000 times. Some of the world’s most famous artists, such as Michelangelo, Pablo Picasso, and Leonardo da Vinci, brought up around 2,000 prompts each or less. Rutkowski’s name also features as a prompt thousands of times in the Discord of another text-to-image generator, Midjourney.

Rutkowski was initially surprised but thought it might be a good way to reach new audiences. Then he tried searching for his name to see if a piece he had worked on had been published. The online search brought back work that had his name attached to it but wasn’t his.

“It’s been just a month. What about in a year? I probably won’t be able to find my work out there because [the internet] will be flooded with AI art,” Rutkowski says. “That’s concerning.”

Stability.AI, the company that built Stable Diffusion, trained the model on the LAION-5B data set, which was compiled by the German nonprofit LAION. LAION put the data set together and narrowed it down by filtering out watermarked images and those that were not aesthetic, such as images of logos, says Andy Baio, a technologist and writer who downloaded and analyzed some of Stable Diffusion’s data. Baio analyzed 12 million of the 600 million images used to train the model and found that a large chunk of them come from third-party websites such as Pinterest and art shopping sites such as Fine Art America.

Many of Rutkowski’s artworks have been scraped from ArtStation, a website where lots of artists upload their online portfolios. His popularity as an AI prompt stems from a number of reasons.

This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (3)

GREG RUTKOWSKI

First, his fantastical and ethereal style looks very cool. He is also prolific, and many of his illustrations are available online in high enough quality, so there are plenty of examples to choose from. An early text-to-image generator called Disco Diffusion offered Rutkowski as an example prompt.

Rutkowski has also added alt text in English when uploading his work online. These descriptions of the images are useful for people with visual impairments who use screen reader software, and they help search engines rank the images as well. This also makes them easy to scrape, and the AI model knows which images are relevant to prompts.

Stability.AI released the model into the wild for free and allows anyone to use it for commercial or noncommercial purposes, although Tom Mason, the chief technology officer of Stability.AI, says Stable Diffusion’s license agreement explicitly bans people from using the model or its derivatives in a way that breaks any laws or regulations. This places the onus on the users.

Some artists may have been harmed in the process

Other artists besides Rutkowski have been surprised by the apparent popularity of their work in text-to-image generators—and some are now fighting back. Karla Ortiz, an illustrator based in San Francisco who found her work in Stable Diffusion’s data set, has been raising awareness about the issues around AI art and copyright.

Artists say they risk losing income as people start using AI-generated images based on copyrighted material for commercial purposes. But it’s also a lot more personal, Ortiz says, arguing that because art is so closely linked to a person, it could raise data protection and privacy problems.

“There is a coalition growing within artist industries to figure out how to tackle or mitigate this,” says Ortiz. The group is in its early days of mobilization, which could involve pushing for new policies or regulation.

One suggestion is that AI models could be trained on images in the public domain, and AI companies could forge partnerships with museums and artists, Ortiz says.

“It’s not just artists … It’s photographers, models, actors and actresses, directors, cinematographers,” she says. “Any sort of visual professional is having to deal with this particular question right now.”

Currently artists don’t have the choice to opt in to the database or have their work removed. Carolyn Henderson, the manager for her artist husband, Steve Henderson, whose work was also in the database, said she had emailed Stability.AI to ask for her husband’s work to be removed, but the request was “neither acknowledged nor answered.”

This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (4)
This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (5)

“Open-source AI is a tremendous innovation, and we appreciate that there are open questions and differing legal opinions. We expect them to be resolved over time, as AI becomes more ubiquitous and different groups come to a consensus as to how to balance individual rights and essential AI/ML research,” says Stability.AI’s Mason. “We strive to find the balance between innovating and helping the community.”

This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (6)

GREG RUTKOWSKI

This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (7)

MS TECH VIA STABLE DIFFUSION

Rutkowski’s “Castle Defense, 2018” (left) and a Stable Diffusion prompted image.

Mason encourages any artists who don’t want their works in the data set to contact LAION, which is an independent entity from the startup. LAION did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Berlin-based artists Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst are working on tools to help artists opt out of being in training data sets. They launched a site called Have I Been Trained, which lets artists search to see whether their work is among the 5.8 billion images in the data set that was used to train Stable Diffusion and Midjourney. Some online art communities, such as Newgrounds, are already taking a stand and have explicitly banned AI-generated images.

An industry initiative called Content Authenticity Initiative, which includes the likes of Adobe, Nikon, and the New York Times, are developing an open standard that would create a sort of watermark on digital content to prove its authenticity. It could help fight disinformation as well as ensuring that digital creators get proper attribution.

“It could also be a way in which creators or IP holders can assert ownership over media that belongs to them or synthesized media that's been created with something that belongs to them,” says Nina Schick, an expert on deepfakes and synthetic media.

Pay-per-play

AI-generated art poses tricky legal questions. In the UK, where Stability.AI is based, scraping images from the internet without the artist’s consent to train an AI tool could be a copyright infringement, says Gill Dennis, a lawyer at the firm Pinsent Masons. Copyrighted works can be used to train an AI under “fair use,” but only for noncommercial purposes. While Stable Diffusion is free to use, Stability.AI also sells premium access to the model through a platform called DreamStudio.

The UK, which hopes to boost domestic AI development, wants to change laws to give AI developers greater access to copyrighted data. Under these changes, developers would be able to scrape works protected by copyright to train their AI systems for both commercial and noncommercial purposes.

While artists and other rights holders would not be able to opt out of this regime, they will be able to choose where they make their works available. The art community could end up moving into a pay-per-play or subscription model like the one used in the film and music industries.

“The risk, of course, is that rights holders simply refuse to make their works available, which would undermine the very reason for extending fair use in the AI development space in the first place,” says Dennis.

In the US, LinkedIn lost a case in an appeals court, which ruled last spring that scraping publicly available data from sources on the internet is not a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Google also won a case against authors who objected to the company’s scraping their copyrighted works for Google Books.

Rutkowski says he doesn’t blame people who use his name as a prompt. For them, “it’s a cool experiment,” he says. “But for me and many other artists, it’s starting to look like a threat to our careers.”

This artist is dominating AI-generated art. And he’s not happy about it. (2024)

FAQs

What is the AI that generates art? ›

One of the most popular AI art generators on the market, Deep Dream is an online tool that enables you to create realistic images with AI. Deep Dream relies on a neural network that was trained with millions of images.

Who owns AI-generated art? ›

'In the case of a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work which is computer-generated, the author shall be taken to be the person by whom the arrangements necessary for the creation of the work are undertaken. ' — Section 9(3) CDPA 1988. On the face of it, this provision appears to resolve the issue of ownership.

Is AI art a threat to artists? ›

In a nutshell, AI is a threat to those who aren't creative or adaptive, and a tool to those who are. Use it to enhance your process if it serves you, but don't fear it. Keep telling stories with your art and you'll find a way to succeed, no matter what technology comes along.

Can you claim AI-generated art as your own? ›

“The US Copyright Office has already refused to grant a copyright registration for AI-generated art because the current copyright law requires human authorship for copyright protection. That means that, under the current rules, AI-generated art has no owner.”

Is AI-generated art real art? ›

AI Art Isn't Original

AI generators use pre-existing images and often merge them to illustrate a requested subject, concept, artistic form, and so on. Even among manmade artworks, some experts consider true art as that which is unique and emotive in a way never encountered before.

How are people making AI-generated images? ›

To generate images, the machine uses two neural networks. The first neural network is used to create the image based on the text input by the user. The second neural network analyzes the generated image with reference images.

Should AI generated art be copyrighted? ›

"AI is able to make functionally creative output in the absence of a traditional human author, and protecting AI-generated works with copyright is vital to promoting the production of socially valuable content. Providing this protection is required under current legal frameworks," he previously told The Register.

Who owns images made by AI? ›

According to these terms, OpenAI actually owns the images you create (which the Terms of Use call "generations"). OpenAI graciously grants you the right to sell your DALL-E 2 images (assuming you can somehow persuade someone to pay you for an image they can copy for free).

Will AI generated art replace artists? ›

Some individuals predict that AI will someday replace artists totally, but this is unlikely to happen soon. Although artificial intelligence is capable of producing technically proficient works of art, it is not yet capable of producing works of truly creative or innovative design.

What does AI art mean for artists? ›

To create AI art, artists write algorithms not to follow a set of rules, but to “learn” a specific aesthetic by analyzing thousands of images. The algorithm then tries to generate new images in adherence to the aesthetics it has learned.

What is the best free AI art Generator? ›

NightCafe is one of the most popular AI art generators on the market. The tool is said to have more algorithms and art-generation features than other AI art generators. Similar to Jasper Art, or any other art generators in this list, it's extremely easy to use NightCafe.

How do I turn a picture into AI art? ›

How to Generate AI Art Free? Fotor AI art generator provides some free art filters, users can use free art filters to create high-quality artworks. Simply click the button "Make Art Photo Now", upload your photo and choose an art filter to create your AI generated images. Try it out!

Are AI-generated images copyright free? ›

AI image generators scrape publicly available pictures from across the web to train their algorithms and to sample them when producing new imagery. Those images are often copyrighted ones that come from news sites or even stock photo sites like Getty.

Is AI-generated art theft? ›

AI-generated art is painting a new path for both experienced artists and consumers. But critics say AI art systems are stealing real people's intellectual property.

Can I use AI-generated art for an album cover? ›

Need some cover art, but not an artist? Now with just a couple clicks, you can use AI to design a custom album cover based on any prompt you can come up with. Brian Hazard tells how. No doubt you've AI-produced images popping up all over social media.

How AI is changing the art world? ›

One of the great uses of artificial intelligence is in the art world. Artists who want to create quality work can now use the power of computers to understand how they want to paint, which colors they are thinking about, what shapes they would like and so on.

Can an AI have emotions? ›

AI and neuroscience researchers agree that current forms of AI cannot have their own emotions, but they can mimic emotion, such as empathy. Synthetic speech also helps reduce the robotic like tone many of these services operate with and emit more realistic emotion.

How do you create an AI? ›

To make an AI, you need to identify the problem you're trying to solve, collect the right data, create algorithms, train the AI model, choose the right platform, pick a programming language, and, finally, deploy and monitor the operation of your AI system.

What does AI-generated mean? ›

AI images are pictures generated through artificial intelligence software. Basically, digital images are created out of thin air from a text prompt.

How long has AI art been around? ›

In the 1990s, AI-generated art began to be used for more than just visual effects. Artists started using AI algorithms to generate music and create new forms of poetry. AI-generated art also began to be used in the field of robotics.

Does AI-generated work give rise to a copyright claim? ›

The U.S. Copyright Office has once again rejected a request for copyright protection on a work created by artificial intelligence, affirming an earlier decision that found the work “lacks the human authorship necessary to support a copyright claim.”

How does copyright work with AI art? ›

Despite popular misconception (explained in the Getty piece), the US Copyright Office has not ruled against copyright on AI artworks. Instead, it ruled out copyright registered to an AI as the author instead of a human.

Can an AI claim copyright? ›

It can either deny copyright protection for works that have been generated by a computer or it can attribute authorship of such works to the creator of the program.

What is artificial intelligence and why does it matter for copyright? ›

Current Legal Status of Artificial Intelligence

Principally, AI is a creation of its developer's mind. Namely, a programmer develops the AI's algorithms. It is argued that the description of these algorithms is protected as software under existing copyright law.

Can AI be an author? ›

Both the United States Patent and Trademark Office and United States Copyright Office have consistently denied applications for intellectual property protection over AI-generated works because the AI-generated works lack “human” inventorship or authorship.

Should robots have rights debate? ›

They are not living beings and therefore should not receive any rights, even if they are smart enough to demand them. If we were to grant robots this kind of power, it would enable them to overtake humans as a result of their ability to work more efficiently.

Will artists be replaced by robots? ›

There has been an explosion of interest in 'creative AI', but does this mean that artists will be replaced by machines? No, definitely not, says Anne Ploin, Oxford Internet Institute researcher and one of the team behind today's report on the potential impact of machine learning (ML) on creative work.

Are AI-generated images art? ›

To me, the answer is clear: AI-generated art is art. Of course, it is. It follows a recipe and has inputs and outputs. Developing the recipe is art, and using the recipe to bring something new into the world is also art.

Will AI replace musicians? ›

AI will not replace musicians in transmitting sensory experiences through music, but it could become increasingly essential for musicians — and all those participating in the current music industry — to understand and leverage it.

How do you ask what AI looks like? ›

Users can enter "/imagine", followed by a text prompt of what they want the AI to produce. Users have been testing the AI's capabilities by entering descriptive words such as HD, hyper-realistic, 4K, wallpaper, and more. All of which work perfectly.

How do I create an image from text? ›

If you want to create AI art from your writing, here are some of the best free AI text-to-image generators.
  1. Nightcafe (Web): The Simplest Free Text-to-Image AI Converter. ...
  2. Starry AI (Web, Android, iOS): Text to Image AI Art With Granular Control. ...
  3. Dall-E Mini (Web): Get a Taste of the Famous OpenAI Dall-E.
11 Jun 2022

What is the best text to image AI? ›

Craiyon (formerly known as DALL-E mini) is the best free AI image generator that can turn any text you write into impressive AI artwork. As you can see the quality is quite good and you get several versions of the same image to choose from.

How do you make a picture look like a Renaissance painting? ›

All you have to do is upload a photo to the DaVinciFace (opens in new tab) website, and you'll be presented with a renaissance-style version in under two minutes. But according to Mathema, the developer of the tool, it's an extremely complex process.

How do I use Google photon? ›

Search with an image saved on your phone
  1. On your Android phone, open the Google app .
  2. At the bottom, tap Discover.
  3. In the search bar, tap Google Lens .
  4. Take or upload a photo to use for your search: ...
  5. Select the area you want to use for your search: ...
  6. At the bottom, scroll to find your search results.

Are AI generated images art? ›

To me, the answer is clear: AI-generated art is art. Of course, it is. It follows a recipe and has inputs and outputs. Developing the recipe is art, and using the recipe to bring something new into the world is also art.

Is Dall-E 2 free? ›

Is DALL-E 2 free to use? Unfortunately not, DALL-E 2 has a credit-based pricing structure. A predetermined number of credits will be given to new users for making, editing, or changing photos.

What is the best free AI art Generator? ›

NightCafe is one of the most popular AI art generators on the market. The tool is said to have more algorithms and art-generation features than other AI art generators. Similar to Jasper Art, or any other art generators in this list, it's extremely easy to use NightCafe.

How do AI generated art work? ›

To create AI art, artists write algorithms not to follow a set of rules, but to “learn” a specific aesthetic by analyzing thousands of images. The algorithm then tries to generate new images in adherence to the aesthetics it has learned.

Can I sell AI generated art as NFT? ›

Can You Sell AI-generated Art As NFTs? Yes. With the increasing popularity of AI art, it's no surprise that users can now generate artwork in the form of NFTs–a type of non-interchangeable digital ledgers that allow creators to sell their art in the digital format.

Will AI generated art replace artists? ›

Some individuals predict that AI will someday replace artists totally, but this is unlikely to happen soon. Although artificial intelligence is capable of producing technically proficient works of art, it is not yet capable of producing works of truly creative or innovative design.

Is AI art the end of artists? ›

from the short-answer:-no dept

The explosion of AI-generated art has taken the internet by storm, and is poised to continue growing for a long time. In turn, that's sparked a lot of conversation (and a lot of backlash) about the impact on artists — but much of the controversy seems misguided or overblown.

Can I use DALL-E for free? ›

When you open an account to use DALL-E, you get 50 credits for the first month. Each credit is used for one DALL-E prompt, one edit request, or a variation request. You get 15 credits for each month after the first month, but the 50 free credits don't roll over after the first month. You can also buy more credits.

How much does DALL-E 2 cost? ›

And the cost? DALL-E 2 has adopted a credit system, giving users an initial 50 credits and then 15 per month. More credit can be bought at $15 for a block of 115.

Can you sell DALL-E images? ›

You now have full rights to commercialize the images you create with DALL·E, so long as you follow our content policy and terms of use. These rights include rights to reprint, sell, and merchandise the images. You get these rights regardless of whether you used a free or paid credit to generate images.

How do I turn a picture into AI art? ›

How to Generate AI Art Free? Fotor AI art generator provides some free art filters, users can use free art filters to create high-quality artworks. Simply click the button "Make Art Photo Now", upload your photo and choose an art filter to create your AI generated images. Try it out!

How do you ask what AI looks like? ›

Users can enter "/imagine", followed by a text prompt of what they want the AI to produce. Users have been testing the AI's capabilities by entering descriptive words such as HD, hyper-realistic, 4K, wallpaper, and more. All of which work perfectly.

How do I use Wonder AI art Generator? ›

It's super simple: Simply describe what you want Wonder to paint — such as “Life Under Sea” or “Shattered Rainbow” — pick a style (Cubist, Dali, Synthwave, Steampunk etc.), or select “no style”; and hit create!

What is the purpose of AI art? ›

So, what exactly is AI Art? In short, it is artwork (visual, audio, or otherwise) generated by a machine learning process—that is, a machine has "learned" some information, and used it to generate a new image.

What does AI mean for art? ›

October 2, 2022. The topic of artificially generated art (AI art) has been making waves within the art industry. The debate on the topic grew when Jason M. Allen, submitted his work, “Théâtre D'opéra Spatial,” to the Colorado State Fair's art competition and recently won. The work was made using AI art.

What does AI-generated mean? ›

AI images are pictures generated through artificial intelligence software. Basically, digital images are created out of thin air from a text prompt.

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