Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Fun and Necromancy with AI Art

 You can practically raise the dead


What isn't to love about being able to resurrect your favorite artist, long dead of course. It's always better to pick a dead artist, especially for acts of necromancy. So, today we're going to pick three dead white male artists. As a human, you don't want to stray too far from home when it comes to borrowing art. The lived experience of other cultures is not yours to borrow. For that reason, I gravitate toward paranoid European males with religious excitation. Obviously, Hieronymus Bosch is my favorite painter. 

What can the AI do? There are serious limitations. I don't know exactly how this algorithm works, but I can guess that items or objects in a painting are tagged and named. Hence, you will never see a television set in a Bosch painting. Asking the AI to have Bosch paint a television is thus outside the realm of possibility. 

What is not outside the realm of possibility, however, is to use an image of a TV set as a template and run it through the algorithm with "Hieronymus Bosch" as one of the imputs. The algorithms I use (Stable Diffusion) do really well with Bosch, and all my Bosch-style stuff is super creepy, which I like. 

Now, it would be boring just to replicate various things in Bosch's style, although, it is worthwhile because Bosch is awesome. So, you're going to end up with some great creepy images. But you'll get bored after a bit. So you say, "I must find another painter to place into the algorithm to give me some variety."

Who do you choose? Caravaggio. That guy sounds like a kick. We need one more and it would be boring to limit ourselves to standard representative art, so let's add Picasso. 

Now, all we need is a really cool image to inspire some art. Remember what I said before. No television sets. In this case, let's keep it straightforward. We know at some point, all three men painted scenes of battle. So, we'll do, "action painting, battlefield, battle," + "Hieronymus Bosch, Caravaggio, Pablo Picasso." The results are below:





These are three interesting offerings. It can be hard to pinpoint the style of any of the artists in the painted scene. It can be difficult to determine how much the AI weighted each of the names when it generated the images. Ultimately, there was a fourth, putrid, image that wasn't worth the effort of uploading. 

Let's look at the first image. It looks like you have a bunch of heavy infantry dug into a trench, and then some naked dudes wrestling. This seems like it's going to be hard to use as a template for future generation. 

Onto the second one. I love it. We have a creepy god-dude who looks like he's engaged with an angry skull man and then some human figures filling it out. In the background, you have a landscape that seems form-fitted around the foreground figures. There's a lot of promise here. 

The third image likewise has that creep factor we like to mine. You have one figure that looks vaguely demonic and two partial figures in various states of waste. Let's play with the second.

We're going to be boring and just throw the image through with the same inputs. We get three new images. The first is a repetition on our source image. In this case, the image is a bit better realized:


Hey. That might be ready for Instagram. 

Anyway, let's check out the next one:


Here we have various figures in apparent action poses. The overall sense of what they're doing is, I guess, striving. They may be in a battle, but not one of them is responding to any of the others. They are all engaged in their own personal strivings, yet pictured together. In the background, you have a human settlement that you see from afar without the humans. Evidence of community though. This is interesting and resonates on a number of levels. It's exactly the type of image we want to keep around. 

Lastly:


This is cool. The figures are interesting looking and you have a Bosch-ean figure who looks like he's just killed a man in a loincloth. So, a disturbing image of a murder. Interestingly, the murderer is a Bosch figure but the two victims are very Caravaggio. Picasso's influence can be seen in the layout of these paintings. Neither Bosch nor Caravaggio would have ever laid out a painting this way. 

Now, for my part, it's quite an honor to have been a part of a collaboration between so many great artistic minds. And when I add my poetry to the generation process, it's that much more rewarding. To wit: AI art generation is fun, rewarding, and potentially necromancy. 

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