Roland Meyer Profile picture
May 10 9 tweets 4 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Diffusion models like Midjourney have been marketed primarily as a cheap way to produce images. And that's a problem, because in many cases they are more a means of re-production that exploits and devalues human labor. But what if we use them as tools to study images?
1/9 Midjourney generated image:...
What's most troubling about these models from a creative viewpoint seems to be their most interesting aspect from a scholarly perspective: they are extremely good at identifying, synthesizing, and reinforcing visual patterns and stereotypes. They're basically cliché detectors
2/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
This, I'd argue, makes them potentially very powerful tools for art history. Since the early 1900s, the days of Warburg, Wölfflin, and Riegl, art history has been interested not only in the grand narrative of masterpieces, but also in the anonymous patterns of visual culture
3/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
Understood as the history of seeing, art history has always attempted to synthesize the common features among very different images of a given period. The notion of »style«, in this sense, meant a pattern of looking at the world through images, a form of visual world-making
4/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
With diffusion models, such patterns can now be synthesized in the form of images. And what becomes visible in this way is more than just a visual »style,« but rather a certain »vibe,« an atmospheric quality shared by images that seem to inhabit the same aesthetic »world« 5/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
At the same time, these images make visible the persistent biases and stereotypes that pervade the history of visual culture, and the limits of the imagination that govern our visual world-making, then and now (just look at the gender roles in most of these images)
6/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
It may seem far-fetched and speculative, but diffusion models could, among other things, open a path to a history of vibes and biases as captured in masses of images. However, there are methodological problems – not the least of which is the ahistoricity of these models
7/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
As impressive as they are at synthesizing and visualizing certain historical vibes, they have no model for historical consistency. If you ask Midjourney for a picture of the Pope from around 1980, it will capture the historical atmosphere, but show you todays's Pope
8/9 Midjourney-generated image:...
Thus, from a scholarly perspective, these models are, at least for the moment, more toys than tools. But, if you ask me, they open up conceptual questions that will be relevant to future research in the history of images, in and beyond art history
9/9 Midjourney-generated image:...

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More from @bildoperationen

Apr 22
So far, I've largely stayed out of the debates about whether or not AI can produce art - for me, that's just not the most interesting question about AI image generation. But as the discussion has progressed, I've developed some thoughts that I'd like to share in this thread
1/14 Midjourney-generated image,...
There’s a simple answer to that question: AI cannot produce art, but of course it can be used to produce art – like (almost) anything else. Since Duchamp, Kaprow, and Sturtevant, anything can become art: a ready-made object, a social event, even a copy of someone else's work
2/14 Midjourney-generated image,...
Art in this sense is not about producing pretty pictures, it's a self-reflexive cultural practice and as such presupposes an intellectual understanding of art that machines simply don't have (and may never have). AI thus in no way challenges such a conceptual notion of art
3/14 Midjourney-generated image,...
Read 15 tweets
Apr 1
The recent wave of pope-related AI images, and the accompanying hot takes about whether or not we've now finally left an era of »visual truth« made me think about the relationship between two modes of online image interpretation: #WildForensis and #InstantMemeification 1/9 Midjourney-generated image, prompt: Pope Francis forensicall
Popular versions of image forensics have been a staple of social media for some time: People just love to speculate about whether or not a widely shared image has been manipulated, and to look for hidden clues of tampering. That’s what I call #WildForensis
2/9
AI images in their current form are a perfect object of such #WildForensis: Clues that an image was generated are now often so subtle that they're only visible at second glance. But you still don't need any technical skills to find them, they are usually hidden in plain sight
3/9
Read 9 tweets
Mar 31
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, aus dem Zyklus: »Proposta del Ministero della Ricerca tedesco per riformare la legge sui contratti di lavoro a tempo determinato in ambito accademico«, 1753 Midjourney-generiertes Bild, Prompt: Proposal by the German
Aus demselben Zyklus, ebenfalls 1753 Prompt: Act on Fixed-Term Employment Contracts in Academia,
Und hier noch ein weiteres Blatt, rückwärtig bezeichnet als »Assemblea delle parti interessate presso il ministero« Midjourney, prompt: Stakeholder meeting at the german resear
Read 4 tweets
Mar 30
Mainly for the sake of my own future reference, I am collecting my longer threads on AI image generation here, starting with this one from last year (which, unlike the others, is still in German)
1/
This one from January speculates on different business models for #VirtualImageArchives and the further platformization of multimodal AI
2/
This one is about AI-generated movies that never existed, and the role of #ArtificialNostalgia
3/
Read 8 tweets
Mar 9
This is truly remarkable and makes me think again about the relationship between AI and photography. What interests me about these generative models is that they simulate a photographic visuality without simulating anything of photography as a lens-based, optical medium
1/6
This sets them apart from a whole tradition of computer-generated images: In what @bernardionysius calls the »scopic regime of computation,« computers were used to simulate three-dimensional worlds made of points, lines, and vectors that could be captured by virtual cameras
2/6
In contrast, AI image generation doesn't use a model of spatial constellations computed in accordance with the laws of optics and the rules of perspective. Rather, by interpolating the visual qualities of masses of digital photographs, it simulates a photographic ›look‹
3/6
Read 7 tweets
Mar 7
Now that the DALL-E has been successfully midjourneyfied, it is becoming apparent that instead of simulating all possible ›styles‹, AI is fostering the emergence of a distinct visual style, born out of popular aesthetic preferences dominating platforms like DeviantArt
1/6 Midjourney generated image, prompt: Cloud in a museum galler
One main characteristic of this AI style seems to be what @pookerman has aptly called »fluffy glamour glow«: The default mode of these images is to shine and sparkle, as if illuminated from within. These are images that radiate
2/6 Midjourney generated image, prompt: Fluffy Glamour Glow
This effect seems to be due in no small part to a particular color scheme, a striking preference for contrasting warm earth tones with blue-greenish metallic colors, reconciling intense lighting and high dynamic range with overall chromatic harmony
3/6 Midjourney generated image, prompt: painter's color palette
Read 9 tweets

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