Jahydin
Hero
Oh, here's the credits:On the larger topic I am sure "AI" art (and I note that in this product the art is largely well known public domain art - the stuff that doesn't look like AI schlock was painted/drawn/engraved by folks like Ivan Bilibin)...
So Interior Art listed here is the pubic domain artists, got it. Thought I recognized some of the art from Hackmaster...Interior Art:
Aleksandra Alekseeva, Ivan Bilibin, Albert Devriendt, Gallen Kallela, Ilya Kovshik,
Frank Cheyne Papé, Nicholas Roerich, Philippe Semeria, Viktor Vasnetsov, John
William Waterhouse, NC Wyeth
Layout, Design and additional AI Art:
Chris Miller
So out of the pictures I posted, any idea which ones were are AI?
Here's the notice on Drive-Thru:When I see a product using algorithmically generated IP theft for art I know I will never purchase it or read it. Might as well have a big label on the front that say "Made with Contempt for the Reader by Grifters!"
"Only the public domain works of deceased classical artists were curated to derive the AI art in this book."
Not sure if that changes your opinion?
Curious, same question I asked Nakana: Feel the same way about animation? Spiderman Across the Spider Verse for example?I get it that people don't think they can draw, don't know how, don't want to etc. I don't like my drawing very much, and it's a lot of work ... but I use it anyway. So the way I see it you have a few choices to illustrate your work that are all respectable. A) Hire/befriend artists. B) Use public domain art. C) Use whatever you can draw/collage/paint. I will note that the original hobby relied heavily on that last one. Look at the art in 1974 OD&D - you can do it.
Not trying to use that as a "gotch ya'", but been debating how I feel about AI in art myself. Seeing a company rocket to the top of "100 greatest films" and being praised for having some of the best animation of all time has really made me consider AI having its uses...