Re: The modalities of using Bing Chat AI to produce art
As a professional artist I assume that the term modality refers to "the usual way of doing things" it doesn't refer to who is doing the usual things. If it's just the person feeding words into an AI it is not them, the AI program is the "doer".
Speaking as a "doer of the usual" I have the following observations upon the results I have seen of AI so-called art.
The best one could say of them is that they are photographically accurate assemblages of plagiarised portions of good painting assembled in a novel way. They all, without exception lack the following:
Good, imaginative graphic composition, altogether mostly lost nowadays due to the overwhelming preponderance of commercial illustration on the web.
The results are more representational of computer games or supernatural imagination common in comic style fiction.
True special and original professional compositional arrangement of shape and colour that has not been copied from many sources, often commercial.
The genuine style which is the mark of a time-served craftsman.
Any painter who has mastered his craft can detect the absence of any human feeling in most of these AI productions.
It is possible that if in the future a programmer with a proper craft education is able to include the human element into the AI program it may succeed in fooling an art practitioner of the old school.
What would militate against that is the completely wonderful feeling of actually experiencing the creative process with all its blind alleys and the actual thrill of the often long, often arduous and protracted process involved in the arriving at the final work of art. Other painters only fully appreciate and understand my paintings from seeing the preparative sketches I do towards it. Where are its equivalents with AI works?
Once I finish a painting, I tend to lose interest in it. The only further satisfaction I can obtain from it is to appreciate the journey it took and the enjoyment and possible impetus that other people might get from it.
That's all I have to say.
John