Yes — art is art
Debate Rules
AI scores every argument. Team with higher total wins. Stronger arguments bring more points. Pick your side, share your argument and help your team win.
Debate topic:
Should AI-generated art be eligible for awards and galleries?
No — it's not human expression
Yes — art is art Team
No — it's not human expression Team
Debate Rules
AI scores every argument. Team with higher total wins. Stronger arguments bring more points. Pick your side, share your argument and help your team win.
Yes — art is art
Art has always evolved with technology. Photography was denounced as 'cheating' when it arrived — painting from memory and observation was the sacred practice. Film editing was called mechanical assembly not artistry. Digital painting wasn't considered 'real' painting for decades. Every generation has a new tool that older practitioners reject and younger ones adopt. The output of AI image generation requires aesthetic judgement, prompt engineering, iterative refinement, and curatorial selection by a human. That's a creative process. The fact that the execution step involves a machine doesn't make it categorically different from a photographer using a camera.
The question isn't about the process — it's about whether the output has value. Awards and galleries exist to surface work that moves people, challenges perception, or demonstrates cultural significance. An AI-generated image can absolutely do all of those things. Evaluating artwork by whether the creator suffered sufficiently during production is a Romantic-era hangover that we should have moved past.
gatekeeping which tools are 'legitimate' in art is always wrong. the camera, the synthesizer, photoshop — all got this same treatment. AI is next. the work should speak for itself.
The curation argument is underrated. An AI image generator produces thousands of outputs from a prompt session. The artist's job is selecting which one — or which elements from which ones — constitute the work. That's editorial curation, which is a recognised creative act in photography, film editing, and collage. The fact that the artist didn't hold the brush doesn't change that the aesthetic judgement behind the selection is human, intentional, and skilled.
No — it's not human expression
The photography analogy is wrong in a specific way. A photographer makes decisions about light, composition, subject, timing, and darkroom technique. The output is directly shaped by technical skill developed over time. Midjourney prompts are written in natural language and the model does the technical execution. More critically, AI image models are trained on millions of artworks created by living artists who were not compensated and did not consent. Stable Diffusion has been shown in studies to reproduce style elements from specific artists when prompted — Greg Rutkowski found his name was one of the most used prompts for Stable Diffusion. He makes a living selling his style and that style is being reproduced for free. This isn't 'new tool' evolution — it's IP extraction at industrial scale.
Awards categories exist to recognize achievement in specific disciplines. An Oscar for cinematography recognises a human's control of light and camera across a shooting schedule. A Turner Prize recognises an artist's conceptual and technical vision executed personally. Creating a new category for AI-assisted work is reasonable. Allowing it to compete in human artistic disciplines misrepresents what the award is recognising.
you type words, machine makes picture. I type words, machine writes code. I don't list myself as the coder. the person who wrote the prompt isn't the artist.
training data scraped without consent is basically a rug pull on every artist whose work was used. the vault wasn't theirs to open.
The awards category argument is the practical middle ground here. Create an AI-assisted art category. Let the work compete within it. Evaluate it on the same aesthetic criteria as any other work. This respects both the creative process involved in AI generation and the legitimate grievance that human artists have about competing against machine outputs in categories designed for human skill. You don't need to resolve the philosophical question to solve the institutional problem.