Crime Student eats AI art in UAF gallery protest, arrested

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Article Archive

By Lizzy Hahn

On Tuesday, January 13, University of Alaska Fairbanks undergraduate student Graham Granger was detained after he had been found “ripping artwork off the walls and eating it in a reported protest,” according to the UAF police department. Granger was chewing and spitting out images pinned to the wall; this artwork was made by Masters of Fine Arts student Nick Dwyer in collaboration with artificial intelligence. Granger claimed that he destroyed the artwork because it was AI generated, according to the report by university police. Police estimated that at least 57 of the 160 images up on the wall were ruined. Granger was arrested for criminal mischief in the 5th degree and booked at the Fairbanks Correctional Center.

Dwyer said that he started using AI in his art around 2017/2018 but had been making art without the use of AI prior to this. In his artist statement for the exhibit that was destroyed, Dwyer says that his work “explores identity, character narrative creation and crafting false memories of relationships in an interactive role digitally crafted before, during and after a state of AI psychosis.” Dwyer explained that he himself fell into AI psychosis – a troubling new phenomenon defined by the Cognitive Behavior Institute as “individuals experiencing psychosis-like episodes after deep engagement with chatbots” – after working with AI for many years. He goes on to explain that “this highlights and embodies a growing trend that can be dangerous or unpredictable which you are not immune to.”

“When you make art, you become vulnerable and so the artwork is vulnerable and that's something that makes it seem more alive or more real or in the moment,” Dwyer said on Wednesday reflecting on the prior day’s protest.

The current exhibit features the artwork of five UAF Masters of Fine Arts candidates Sarah Dexter, Nick Dwyer, Amy Edler, Iris Sutton and Matthew Wooller.

Granger is a student in UAF’s film and performing arts program. His court date is scheduled for next Tuesday, January 20.
 
That's honestly to be commended

At least he's not whining on twitter

The world wouldn't be the grey dystopia it is if we didn't have the pressure release of social media

says the guy posting on a fucking forum instead of doing something
 
I'm sorry, but when I hear the name Dwyer, all I can ever think of is this dude.
Screenshot_20260115-090620 (1).jpg
He was rocking out on air guitar. And now apparently, he's making fake art.
 
Granger was chewing and spitting out images pinned to the wall;
First thought: yeah crazy ass art student, what a surprise
Dwyer says that his work “explores identity, character narrative creation and crafting false memories of relationships in an interactive role digitally crafted before, during and after a state of AI psychosis.”
Next thought: strike that, this second guy is both crazy and stupid. First guy did nothing wrong.
 
"Erm, sorry sweaty, but AI is going to eat all you artists' lunches. :smug:"

A hero:
 
Really helping the cause of showing Artists to be a sane group and not crazy grifters realising their time is up. Always remember this post:
View attachment 8422381
Hang on, I have a couple for you:
1768487713986.png
The Banana taped to the wall is called "The Comedian". It was worth 6.2 Million.
I'd rather have AI Slop instead of "art"

The Animators Survival Kit states the following:
I had an unnerving experience in Canada when a friend asked me to give a one-hour address to
a large high school gathering of computer animation students. They had a very impressive
set-up of expensive computers but, from what I could see of their work, none of them seemed
to have any idea of drawing at all. During my talk I stressed the importance of drawing and the
great shortage of good draftsmen.

A laid-back greybeard professor interrupted to inform me, 'What do you mean? All of us
here draw very well.'

Words failed me.

At the end of the talk, I showed them how to do a basic walk, and as a result got mobbed
at the exit, the kids pleading desperately for me to teach them more, i escaped, but I’m afraid
that's what the situation is out there - a lack of any formal training and no one to pass on the
‘knowledge'.

You don't know what you don't know.

One of the problems rampant today is that, in the late 1960s, realistic drawing generally
became considered unfashionable by the art world, and no one bothered to learn how to do it
any more.

The Slade school in London used to be world-famous for turning out fine British draftsmen. A
distinguished British painter who taught at the Slade asked me, 'How did you learn how to do
animation?' I answered that I was lucky enough to have done a lot of life drawing at art school,
so without realizing it i got the feeling for weight which is so vital to animation.

Then I said, 'What am I telling you for? You're teaching at the Slade and it's famous for its
life drawing and excellent draftsmen.'

'If the students want to do that,' he said, 'then they've got to club together and hire them¬
selves a model and do it in their own home.' At first i thought he was joking - but no! Life
drawing as a subject went out years ago. It wasn't even on the curriculum!

! had a boyhood friend who became a bigwig in art education circles. He ran international
conferences of the arts. About sixteen years ago he invited me to Amsterdam to a conference
of the deans of the leading American art colleges. He knew me well enough to know I was
bound to say controversial things, so I was invited as his wild card.

in my talk 1 found myself lamenting the lack of trained, talented artists and that I was ham¬
pered in my own studio's work because I couldn't find trained disciplined artists to hire. The
applicants' portfolios were full of textures, abstract collages, scribbles, often nude photos of
themselves and friends. No real drawing. I didn't realise how strongly I felt about this and as I
talked I found myself nearly in tears.
See Image below

animator survival.jpg

Art education is in a very poor state so nobody produces anything worth looking at.
 
Gee. Talk about a "starving artist." Not a cliché for no reason!

Artists are actual niggers. I went to art school and apart from the massive waste of time and money, I only learned to despise every single fucking artists. Fuck, if Adolf Hitler himself got accepted to art school he would have come out worse, I guarantee it.
 
Really helping the cause of showing Artists to be a sane group and not crazy grifters realising their time is up. Always remember this post:
View attachment 8422381
In fairness I think "Autofellatio in Clay" next to supposedly serious art is the kind of artistic statement I can support. It worked wonders here, drove someone away from being an artist entirely. Good things happen when would-be artfags put down the paintbrushes.
 
Back
Top Bottom