Celebrating a change in the Cap'n's uniform, adding a stripe which promotes him from Commander to Cap'n. |
Every year Comic-Con is a petri dish of emerging technologies, raw capitalism, suppositious art, trinket peddlers, cosplay, and new legal developments. For those with patience and curiosity, there are nuggets of excellence and strength hiding around every corner.
For me, one of the real delights was the bunny rabbit at the bottom of this cartoon by Sullivant:
Opossum to rabbit: "I had a drink and it went to my head." Image courtesy of Taraba Illustration Art |
Sullivant drew the bunny the hard way: we are looking down, from behind, with the rabbit's head tilted back.
Note Sullivant's foreshortening of those ears |
The artist's honest struggle is there for all to witness; look at how he gouged that paper. Look at those lovely brush marks.
One of the major topics of conversation at Comic-Con was the impact of AI. Today the machine can do the struggling for us, quickly and invisibly. No more chewed up paper. No human sweat and strain unless the machine is instructed to simulate it. The next generation of artists will be trained in "prompts" and will be able to generate a hundred images of a bunny from any angle, "in the style of Sullivant."
As you can imagine, the artists exhibiting at Comic-Con were uniformly unhappy about what AI portends for traditional art. They sold T shirts to make the point.
It's not clear how effective this T shirt campaign will be in stemming the tide of AI. Artists argue that AI "steals" images but computer scientists and lawyers at Comic-Con say "no," AI does not copy or steal in any sense cognizable under copyright law. AI learns from pre-existing images as traditional artists do.
Lots of changes are underfoot. Evolutionary transformations are taking place. But regardless of marketing considerations, the strength of good drawing remains immutable. I often quote Ralph Waldo Emerson here: "Excellence is the new forever."