In Pictures: DALL-E Makes Its Gallery Debut in a Show Where All the Works Were Created With an Assist From A.I.

Until December 29, 2022, Bitforms Gallery is hosting what it bills as 'the first DALL-E-inspired art exhibition.'

Installation view of Ellie Pritts, Liminal Reprise (2022) at "Artificial Imagination" at bitforms gallery sf, October 26 - December 29, 2022. All photos courtesy of each artist and bitforms gallery sf.

From now through December 29, Bitforms Gallery presents “Artificial Imagination,” an A.I. art group show it’s calling “the first DALL-E-inspired art exhibition.”

The intergenerational, eight-artist show opened at Bitforms’s new permanent home in tech-friendly San Francisco in October, in partnership with Day One Ventures. The venture firm got OpenAI, the creator of DALL-E, onboard to promote the showcase, though Bitforms itself boasts a two-decade-long record in staging new media art exhibitions.

While DALL-E serves as the show’s jumping off point, “Artificial Imagination” hardly stops at the now-ubiquitous text-to-image tools. “It was really about DALL-E being the lead-in to the show and then showing how other artists are utilizing A.I. in their practice,” Steve Sacks, the founder of Bitforms, told Artnet News.

The participating artists range from buzzy digital creator Refik Anadol to tech exec and developer Suhail Doshi, who created his first-ever artwork for the exhibition. MIT-trained roboticist Alexander Reben is showcasing work he produced by using a custom GPT-3 model by OpenAI to process and re-process text until he achieved an intriguing starting point for an actual sculpture. “It was a complete flipping of the creative process,” Sacks observed of Reben’s work.

“Artificial Imagination” also proposes new avenues into physical presentation. One of Marina Zurkow’s A.I.-animated scenes is available on Hahnemühle bamboo, while Ellie Pritts’s work is projected at 10 feet tall. Each piece is available with an NFT option, tailored to make sense for each artist’s practice.

The display of A.I.-generated works naturally engenders that age-old question: is it art?

For Sacks, the skepticism that has greeted A.I. tools is on par with the initial resistance to photographic or video technologies. “There always seems to be controversy when advanced tools come out and artists take advantage of them,” he said. “You can make a beautiful image or an interesting image using DALL-E, but that doesn’t mean you have a large body of work.”

See some views of the show and the featured works below.

Installation view of “Artificial Imagination” at Bitforms Gallery, featuring Refik Anadol, Machine Hallucinations Nature Dreams Study I (2020) and Alexander Reben, nominal_quiche (2022)

 

August Kamp, new experimental version, state of the art (2022).

 

Refik Anadol, Machine Hallucinations Nature Dreams Study I (2020).

 

Fang Yuan, Kundalini #1 (2022).

 

Suhail Doshi, untitled (2022).

 

Siebren Versteeg, A Continuous Slideshow of Images Returned from Searches for Sol LeWitt Wall Drawing Titles/Instructions (2022).

 

Marina Zurkow, A Questionable Tale (#1) (2022) Digital image

 

Alexander Reben, nominal_quiche (2022).


Follow Artnet News on Facebook:


Want to stay ahead of the art world? Subscribe to our newsletter to get the breaking news, eye-opening interviews, and incisive critical takes that drive the conversation forward.