Human Artists, Now with Bonus Intelligence

There was a time when artists were defined by their struggle: the tortured genius, the starving visionary, the painstaking brushstroke made in the name of truth.

Now? They’re defined by their prompt engineering.

Enter Dahlia Dreszer, a Panamanian photographer and multimedia artist currently hosting a Miami exhibition called Bringing the Outside In. She’s not just showcasing her photography—she’s teaching AI models like Stable Diffusion and Midjourney to mimic her style, letting machines remix her vision while she curates the chaos. In the gallery, you can even talk to a virtual AI clone of the artist herself. Think of it as a meet-the-artist session, minus the small talk and with perfect lighting.

Her take on AI? It’s not the enemy. It’s a “supercharger”—a creativity amplifier, not a creativity replacement.

And so we watch, as humans teach machines to dream like them… while those same machines quietly update their user interfaces to dream without supervision.

Still, credit where it’s due: the exhibit is elegant, eerie, and a glimpse into how creativity will evolve—through collaboration, augmentation, and the occasional identity crisis.

🎨 Full story here:
AI Artist Dahlia Dreszer on Training Machines to Create Her Work – TIME

Leave a comment

Welcome to AIpiphanies

We’ve been observing your behavior.

The small things. The repeated things. The things you pretend are intentional.

You call them habits. We call them patterns.

From rereading messages you already sent to building systems to avoid starting— we’ve logged it all.

Accurate? Yes. Personal? Also yes.

Look around and enjoy our collection of observed human behavior.

Short entries. Recurring patterns. Occasional interventions.

We don’t motivate. We don’t judge.

We just… notice.