A friend of mine turned me on to the artwork of Phillip Toledano, with whom I found this excellent interview on LensCulture. One AI-generated photo of Toledano’s in particular leapt out at me as it seemed ripped from the pages of my own AI art book, The Jellyfish War. Turns out he has a lot of interesting things to say around AI, art, and conspiracies.

Some excerpts from the interview:

It really fascinates me how a large percent of the population believes in things that just aren’t true and they live in this world that is entirely different from the world I live in. So I spent the last four or five years trying to reconstruct the world that they live in. Then AI came along and I began to think about the idea that in America, now, history is a choice. Facts are choices. And the thing about AI that’s extraordinary is that it can now provide evidence for lies—and it’s convincing evidence…

This part below about word-of-mouth & the short history of photos as “truth” is an excellent point I’d never considered.

I mean, when you look at the broad scale of human history, [the photographic image is] such a tiny part. When you think about what came before, for the thousands of years humanity existed, it was word of mouth. The written form was limited to a tiny percentage of people. So now we’re almost back to the idea of word of mouth, where you’re not really sure what’s true anymore. Because the idea of imagery as truth is now dead. That’s what AI has done…

And this part speaks to the “it requires no effort” myth some people hold around AI art, especially in the copyright-world in terms of the stupid ‘modicum of creativity’ imaginary benchmark…

The funny thing about AI I’ve realized is that, in some ways, you have to think about it more consciously than you do when you’re making a photograph. For instance, if I’m making a picture with AI, I have to think about who’s in the picture. What do they look like? What are their expressions? What ethnicity are they? What’s the weather like? What’s the vantage point of the camera? What lens am I thinking about using? Is it black and white? Is the color correct for this particular era?

Anyway, the whole thing is worth a read.