Pablo Delcan allows everyone to become a non-AI artist with community project Prompt Brush 2.0
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Pablo Delcan allows everyone to become a non-AI artist with community project Prompt Brush 2.0
Pablo shares prompts with an eager artistic community and invites others to participate in the process. He teaches digital tools and is not opposed to them, but he warns that ignoring human capability and letting machine work dominate can become a problem. He frames indolence as not innovation and values the exchange created by Prompt Brush, where a prompt written by one person becomes a drawing made by another, returning to the original writer. His style favors carefree doodling rather than photo-realistic AI imagery. Prompt Brush 2.0 provides minimal tools and imaginative prompts, with artists subverting expectations. The project offers no prescribed drawing method, relying on coherence from shared constraints rather than filters.
"It makes sense for Pablo to share the ask with his following and invite them in on the process. He's a designer, artist and teacher and he's not against digital tools, in fact he teaches a class about them. But when people begin to ignore what they are capable of and allow machine work to prevail, that can become an issue. Indolence isn't innovation. Opening Prompt Brush up to an eager artistic community is proof of that."
"You pick a prompt someone wrote, you draw it, the person who wrote it receives it. I feel like I got so much from this exercise of drawing things for other people that I was curious and excited to see if other people might get something out of it too, says Pablo. A drawing made by a person for another person feels like a small good thing right now."
"Whereas AI art' typically revolves around pumping out imagery that is photo-realistic, Pablo's style is the absolute opposite, the definition of care-free doodling. For Prompt Brush 2.0, the website offers a minimal array of tools for artists to use for their little masterpieces most of them, due to the black lines, white page and small canvas, end up looking like spiritual successors of Pablo's first iteration of the project."
"There's no prescription for how to draw and that's how Pablo likes it: The coherence comes from that, not from a filter or a way to go about drawing things. A blank page and a black brush. That's it."
Read at www.itsnicethat.com
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