A slow day today. Learning more about what AI can do. It can do vast amounts, yet part of me feels that it can't really get any better, just cheaper. There's no need for more 'human-ness', it's as good as it needs to be, I think. We don't want emotions or ego, or ever-present spectre of the fear of death or insignificance, do we? I'm uncertain if those things help humanity, though they may help life strive or fight to endure...
I feel that the capabilities for text-based games haven't really been explored. Generative AI can act like a literary holodeck if prompted correctly. Any sort of game is easily created. One could supply a photo and play 'I spy' with an object it spies, or play hide and seek in an imagined location, an imagined mansion of its design.
For visual art, I can see that it will speed up and assist the tasks of sourcing image references, staging, lighting, texturing, and supply models, poses, or whole scenes, if desired. Those tools in the 15th century were drawing and shading, in the 19th century were cartoons and painted studies, and in the 20th created from photographs or computer graphics. I've used all of this and will continue. These techniques evolve, while the spirit of art remains the same. AI is not 'creative', if anything its beautiful images expose the flaw in shallow and untalented-yet-pretty art like 'abstract' painting, like 'digital' art. To actual artists AI is wonderful; it shames the talentless while aiding the creatives. It also makes real-world art and physical skills more valuable.
My unique ideas will remain the same, and mine, though if I wanted an artificial intelligence to supply a random idea in some surrealistic-tool sort of way I could collaborate in the way one collaborates with another artist. I collaborate well generally, with Deborah or Sabine Kussmaul for example, but I can only take so much. Artists are artists because we have something to say. We don't have something to tell someone else to say! This is the ultimate rebuke to fears about a future technology harming art.
I looked through my PRS statistics with amusement and bafflement following the recent quarterly payment of £80. Almost all of these royalties, with 1,970,496 plays worldwide, came from 'Smashing My House Of Cards', yet seemingly from a period before it was released. This is often confusing though, periods are often back-dated, and many aspects of royalties are blended over inexact time-periods. My most popular tracks are (cue chart countdown music!):
1. Smashing My House Of Cards.
2. There Is No Love And The More I Search The Less I Find
3. The Planet's Oracle
4. Anyone Can Fall In Love
5. The Runner
'Anyone Can Fall In Love' is #4 because it was played by Bahamas & Western Hemisphere PPS - TV, and Japanese (JASRAC) General & Broadcasting played 'Eastern Dreams'. Cyprus TV and Radio played quite a lot of my work, more than any other broadcaster; so thank you all of these broadcasters for their small but important airplay.
Tomorrow I'll start glazing 'All Things Bright And Beautiful'.


