By now I've already posted a few of my own drawings, so interested parties can go check them out.
This AI-generated art stuff is quite interesting, especially if you have a pretty expansive palette of influences that can all be combined simultaneously.
That's right, you heard right. If you smash a bunch of different artists into an AI artwork prompt, it does seem to integrate some of each listed influence (if you can believe it)!
I took that as a real challenge, which led to some of the most interesting-looking stuff I ever laid eyes on.
People are poo-pooing the AI art as a gimmick, and I don't disagree with that assessment. BUT! There can be so many fascinating things to uncover through this medium.
Check out these examples of "A Wild-West Rodeo Scene" done in the style of:
Don Van Vliet
Vincent Van Gogh
Gustav Klimt
Francisco Goya
Juan Gris
Joan Miró
Rene Magritte
Max Ernst
Georgia O'Keeffe
John Singer Sargent
Egon Schiele
Lucian Freud
Wassily Kandinsky
Pablo Picasso
Salvador Dalí
Jean Dubuffet



These four images are certainly all unique in their own regard. You may have noticed the little orange crayon in the bottom right corner of all of them, too. I made all of these images on Craiyon, which still has yet to force me to register on their site.
So perhaps there are other AI-artwork-generators out there that will produce a higher-resolution image of these things, or maybe even Craiyon itself. I just don't care to do any more legwork than I just did. I probably got at least 14k steps today.
That joke sucked. Anyway, enjoy these strange amalgamations of what a computer thinks sixteen artists would do simultaneously and on the same canvas.
Cheers!
-A