I'm actually a person making technical decisions (art decisions in the past) in a VFX/art studio, and I'm talking about production use. No generative AI currently passes any reasonable production quality bar, but is being tried by everyone for doing the work that can't be done or is cost-prohibitive otherwise, for example animation, long series with style transfer, filler assets creation etc. Anything that only has a text prompt can be discarded instantly. You have to be able to finetune it on your own material for consistency (of course I'm not talking about dubious 3rd party models), you need higher order guidance (e.g. controlnets, especially custom ones) and many other things. In the hands of a skilled person, a trivial Krita/Photoshop plugin (Firefly, SD, SD realtime) blows anything MJ can offer out of the water, simply because it has all that and you can't do much with text, it doesn't have enough semantic capacity to express artistic intent. I'm not even starting on animation.
In fact, anything that involves non-explicitly guided one-shot generation of anything with light/shadow/colors/perspective is entirely out of the question with the current crop, because all models are hallucinating hard and aren't controllable within a single generation. There are attempts at fixing the perspective without explicit guidance, but it's going to be a long way and it's not super relevant to how things are done anyway.
And for fine art, nothing beats a human painter, doing it by throwing prompts at AI mostly misses the point. I'm not even sure what you mean by fine art in this context, actually - surely not generating artsy-looking images from a prompt for fun?
orbital-decay|2 years ago
In fact, anything that involves non-explicitly guided one-shot generation of anything with light/shadow/colors/perspective is entirely out of the question with the current crop, because all models are hallucinating hard and aren't controllable within a single generation. There are attempts at fixing the perspective without explicit guidance, but it's going to be a long way and it's not super relevant to how things are done anyway.
And for fine art, nothing beats a human painter, doing it by throwing prompts at AI mostly misses the point. I'm not even sure what you mean by fine art in this context, actually - surely not generating artsy-looking images from a prompt for fun?