Synthetic intelligence and artwork have been controversial for years. So it is no shock that Christie’s faced protests over its first-ever AI-dedicated auction, which the public sale home says was the primary ever from any main public sale home, confronted protests. In February, greater than 5,600 artists signed an open letter asking Christie’s to cancel the sale.
“Lots of the artworks you propose to public sale had been created utilizing AI fashions which might be identified to be skilled on copyrighted work with out a license,” the open letter reads partly. “These fashions, and the businesses behind them, exploit human artists, utilizing their work with out permission or cost to construct business AI merchandise that compete with them. Your help of those fashions, and the individuals who use them, rewards and additional incentivizes AI firms’ mass theft of human artists’ work.”
A consultant for Christie’s shared an announcement in regards to the situation.
“From the start, two issues have been true in regards to the artwork world: one, artists are impressed by what got here earlier than them, and two, artwork can spark debate, dialogue, and controversy,” the assertion reads. “The discussions round digital artwork, together with artwork created utilizing AI know-how, aren’t new and in some ways ought to be anticipated. Many artists — Pop artists, for instance — have been the topic of comparable discussions. Having mentioned that, Christie’s, a worldwide firm with world-class specialists, is uniquely positioned to discover the comparatively new and ever-changing house of digital artwork: the artists, collectors, market and challenges.”
The consultant additionally pointed to a positive reception to the auction on X, previously Twitter. Artist Daniel Ambrosi tweeted, “So thrilled to have been part of this unforgettable expertise… and delighted that my art work goes house with somebody!”
An individual appears at AI art work created by Huemin referred to as Dream-0 #9 at a press preview for Augmented Intelligence at Christie’s in New York.
The public sale, dubbed Augmented Intelligence, closed Wednesday morning. Greater than 30 tons attracted a whole lot of bids and introduced in $728,784, Christie’s studies. And there is a generational twist: The public sale home says 37% of registrants had been fully new to Christie’s, and 48% of bidders had been millennials or members of Gen Z.
“The public sale redefines the evolution of artwork and know-how, exploring human company within the age of AI inside effective artwork,” a promotional assertion from Christie’s learn. “From robotics to GANs to interactive experiences, artists incorporate and collaborate with synthetic intelligence in a wide range of mediums together with work, sculptures, prints, digital artwork and extra.”
(GANs, or generative adversarial networks, are generative AI fashions that create new knowledge or photos that resemble the info they’re skilled on.)
An individual holds a print out of AI art work created by ClownVamp’s The Junk Machine at a press preview for Augmented Intelligence at Christie’s in New York.
The open letter gathered 6,493 signatures, of which 5,646 had been verified. The signers vary from illustrators to authors to artwork therapists to cinematographers, from nations all throughout the globe.
The best worth within the sale was $277,200 for a piece by Refik Anadol titled Machine Hallucinations — ISS Goals — A. It used a knowledge set of greater than 1.2 million photos taken from the Worldwide Area Station and satellites.
One other work, Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst’s Embedding Examine 1 & 2, offered for $94,500. It was the results of a text-to-image mannequin skilled on altered photos of Herndon herself and got here to Christie’s following its inclusion within the 2024 Whitney Biennial.