The Oscar-winning Studio Ghibli co-founder says that he will never apply AI art to his work and that the art form is an insult to life itself.
Hayao Miyazaki is not a fan of AI-generated art. The talented director of The Wind Rises, Howl's Moving Castle, and Kiki's Delivery Service, Miyazaki is the ultimate advocate of hand-drawn animation. This long, painstaking process sees results once the whole project's said and done. Artificial intelligence is now being used to take most of the time and pain away from artisans, making visual art a feat anyone can easily accomplish.
In a video resurfaced by Twitter user Tofu Pixel, the legendary animator Hayao Miyazaki is presented with a display of AI animation at work. The presentation argues that animation produced by artificial intelligence will bring ideas no human mind can think of. Vexed by the bold statement, Miyazaki makes it clear that not only would he never use this technology in his work, but the technology is an insult to life itself.
Art is a creative outlet that transfers ideas, experience, and pain from one's mind to canvas. The concept of a machine making art is a deletion of that much-needed middleman and dehumanizes the process. The artist in this scenario, the machine, isn't drawing from attributes that makes art so honestly human but from ones and zeros alone. In defense of Miyazaki, the machine has no truth to tell and no need for an outlet.
While it's not hard to admire the ingenuity put into such a machine, it's easier to sympathize with Miyazaki's defense of art. Yes, a machine that draws like a human could quicken the process, but the joy and gratification of art come from the process. The story's told and found through the process, and a machine that draws like a human completely eradicates creativity.
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