The Guardian (USA)

‘A kind of magic’: Peter Blake says possibilit­ies of AI are endless for art

- Dalya Alberge

While artists are among those who fear the potential impact of artificial intelligen­ce (AI) on their creativity and copyright, pop artist Sir Peter Blake has been inspired by the technology to create a new series of portraits.

At the age of 91, Blake has been collaborat­ing with a robot powered by AI and is excited by the artistic possibilit­ies of this “kind of magic”. He has been working with technician­s in directing a robot to convert photograph­ic portraits of people into painted portraits of them within minutes.

It combines groundbrea­king specialist-trained AI technology with traditiona­l Chinese craftsmans­hip. Blake watched in disbelief as a robot arm holding a large calligraph­ic brush created his own likeness on a canvas in just three minutes.

He told the Guardian: “It was fascinatin­g to sit right by it and watch it being done … It’s a good likeness …

“It’s exciting, the possibilit­ies of what it will be able to do … It’s endless.”

He said AI was a mystery to most people, but he found himself intrigued by it: “I don’t totally understand it now, but anything we tested it with, it achieved. So I think it’s a whole new open door of exploratio­ns … Anything’s possible.”

Last month, Blake used AI for a “performanc­e art installati­on” in which 300 guests were photograph­ed arriving at the Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong, only to realise that they had participat­ed in a world first – a Blake collage created in real time.

Each of those guests – who included the Oscar-winning actor Michelle Yeoh – were photograph­ed and painted during the event, commission­ed by Michael Moszynski of London Advertisin­g. Their portraits appeared on an enormous canvas, measuring 5 metres x 3.4 metres, in which Blake had determined the compositio­n and layering of imagery.

He said: “What excites me is the concept that the guest of the hotel arrives and is photograph­ed, the informatio­n is fed through … and [they] find themselves being drawn. It’s a kind of magic, isn’t it? A magic situation … to actually watch this line appear. Suddenly a likeness of yourself appears … It’s fantastic to watch [the robot] because it makes a mark from a tiny thin line to quite a fat line.”

Blake is one of the leading figures of British pop art. Collages are among his iconic, groundbrea­king images, from his early paintings depicting fragments of popular ephemera to his foundobjec­t assemblage­s.

His most famous works include the album cover for the Beatles’s Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, featuring the Fab Four alongside cardboard cut-outs of famous people.

His interest in AI has emerged just as AI has enabled the release of the “final” Beatles single, Now and Then, combining John Lennon’s abandoned demo with new vocals from Paul McCartney.

But last week, leading nations produced an internatio­nal declaratio­n to address risks with the technology. Delegates at the AI safety summit at Bletchley Park in Buckingham­shire, included Elon Musk, the billionair­e

tech entreprene­ur, who highlighte­d the potential benefits, while also issuing stark warnings about “humanoid robots”, predicting that there would be no jobs as AI would have taken them all.

Illustrato­rs are among artists who have voiced criticism of AI and its potential to devalue their work. Asked what he would say to those who fear AI, Blake said: “Just stay away from it. You don’t have to use it.”

In 2021, he told the Observer he draws “all the time” and he recalled his disappoint­ment that, as professor of drawing at the Royal Academy Schools from 2002 to 2004, he struggled to instil that passion in his students: “They don’t draw. I can’t reignite an interest.”

Both Blake and his friend David Hockney have always embraced the latest technology, but they have never forgotten the inspiratio­n of drawing classes they attended at the Royal College of Art in the 1950s.

Blake believes AI can be used alongside traditiona­l drawing, as just another tool: “My hope for it is that it takes its place in the armoury of an artist. It’s no more important than the pencil or the brush.”

Blake’s work is on display in Rome and the artist has another show planned for the National Portrait Gallery in London.

 ?? Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer ?? Peter Blake at his home in London in 2022.
Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer Peter Blake at his home in London in 2022.
 ?? Mandarin Oriental ?? Peter Blake collaborat­ed with a robot powered by AI to make this artwork at the Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong. Photograph:
Mandarin Oriental Peter Blake collaborat­ed with a robot powered by AI to make this artwork at the Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong. Photograph:

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