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AI is Boring

Updated: Oct 22


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To be honest, AI-generated art often feels… boring. That’s why I started creating my Facetune portraits

—to push back against the predictable and formulaic outputs flooding social media and digital galleries.



Using Facetune, a tool most people associate with superficial edits, I explore the tension between perfection and imperfection. Every portrait I make is a reflection of human complexity, not just another polished face or generic trend. I love how small digital manipulations can completely shift how we perceive someone, revealing both vulnerability and strength in ways AI simply can’t replicate.


For me, this work is about more than aesthetics. It’s about questioning the obsession with flawless visuals and challenging the idea that technology should replace human creativity. AI might be fast and precise, but it lacks nuance, intention, and emotional depth. My process, on the other hand, thrives on unpredictability—I make choices that surprise me, choices an algorithm could never make on its own.


I want viewers to feel a mix of intrigue and discomfort when they see my portraits. They’re meant to make you pause and reflect on what beauty, identity, and imperfection really mean in a digital age. Unlike AI-generated art, which can feel repetitive, my work evolves with every piece I create, keeping it fresh, personal, and uniquely human.


If you’re tired of predictable digital art, my Facetune portraits offer something different—a conversation between technology and imagination, with humanity at the center. Explore my work and see why, for me, AI is boring, but human creativity will always be endlessly exciting.

 
 
 

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