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There’s a lot of noise lately from people who think AI-generated work
isn’t art. That it’s “mass-produced,” “cheap,” or somehow less valid than
traditional methods. Let’s clear that up.
Art isn’t defined by the tool. It’s defined by the decisions behind it.
I use AI tools to create watercolor-and collage style designs. The
process is slow, technical, and deliberate. I don’t get usable results on the
first prompt. I refine. I reject. I adjust. I walk away and come back. That’s
not automation it’s work.
The tool doesn’t choose the composition. It doesn’t understand the audience. It doesn’t know the difference between a holiday card for kids and a mid-century invitation for adults. I do.
Calling AI-assisted work “cheap” ignores the reality of how it’s made. It
also ignores the fact that many traditional artists use digital brushes, stock
elements, and prebuilt templates. The medium doesn’t define the value. The
execution does.
If you think AI can’t produce art, you’re not paying attention to the
process. You’re reacting to the tool.
I don’t create “stuff.” I design products. I build collections. I teach
through example. And I use every tool available to do it well.
If that’s not art, then the definition needs updating.
The  artwork shown in
this blog are all of Susang6’s creations using AI tools 
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