Williams, Pete ORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0002-4402-4250
(2025)
Tears and rain – AI and authorship: Challenging concepts of the unique through unauthored rarity.
Journal of Illustration, 12 (1).
pp. 171-193.
ISSN 2052-0204
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Text (AAM of article)
Tears Rain by Pete Williams - Part 1 Final Edit.pdf - Accepted Version Restricted to Repository staff only until 1 April 2026. Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial. Download (1MB) | Request a copy |
Abstract / Summary
This article explores the evolving nature of authorship and meaning-making in illustration against the backdrop of artificial intelligence (AI)-generative art technologies and image saturation. Moving beyond surface debates around AI obsolescence, it aims to reframe discourse through an interdisciplinary lens of theory, visual culture and futurism. The central hypothesis posits that in our eagerness to declare authorial intent’s ‘death’, we may have failed to recognize how meaning has migrated rather than disappeared. By synthesizing postmodern theory with an altermodernist framework, specifically through the combination of Frederic Jameson’s ‘schizophrenic’ visual culture with Nicolaus Bourriaud’s concept of the ‘Semionaut’. The article claims that authorial significance has shifted into uncharted territories we remain blind to – with critical repercussions for illustrators’ roles as cultural curators, in an era where users of AI can infinitely generate ‘unique’ images of high quality without any illustrative ability. Perhaps the true value for illustrative arts lies in cultivating ‘rareness’ – contextually embedded artefacts imbued with intention that cut through visual noise. This pivot has profound implications for professional practice, ethics and training. The article aims to initiate new dialogues examining these future-facing considerations. This scholarly inquiry emerges from over a decade of critically investigating impacts of computational advances on image production and reception to identify the hidden impact of postmodernism as it accelerates through new technical abilities provided by AI to suggest new authorial mutations.
Item Type: | Article |
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Identification Number: | 10.1386/jill_00113_1 |
Additional Information: | © Pete Williams, 2025. The definitive, peer reviewed and edited version of this article is published in Journal of Illustration, vol. 12 issue 1, pages 171-193, 2025. 10.1386/jill_00113_1 |
ISSN: | 2052-0204 |
eISSN: | 2052-0212 |
Subjects: | Creative Art & Design > Illustration & Drawing |
Department: | Falmouth School of Art |
SWORD Depositor: | Mr Pub Router |
Depositing User: | Mr Pub Router |
Date Deposited: | 23 Jul 2025 13:02 |
Last Modified: | 23 Jul 2025 13:02 |
URI: | https://repository.falmouth.ac.uk/id/eprint/6078 |
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