frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Open in hackernews

What happens when you post a real Monet and say it's AI?

https://twitter.com/jediwolf/status/2054776716770320631
62•nailer•1h ago

Comments

Invictus0•54m ago
Shows the pretentiousness of the twitterati more than anything else
Nasrudith•52m ago
Trading on pretentiousness in cliques has been a thing in art long before the internet and Twitter.
jjulius•42m ago
Is it really showing just "the pretentiousness of the twitterati" when there are comments in this HN thread making the same kind of flip responses?
camillomiller•49m ago
Shows nothing about AI, shows a lot about how low the bar has fallen for not taking everything you see on social media at face value. Enticing an easy and predictable knee jerk reaction from a couple dozen users also hardly proves anything.
Geee•48m ago
Being able to imitate Monet doesn't make you Monet. AI can't create anything original.
sd9•43m ago
This is a real Monet.
Geee•34m ago
I know, but it could be AI-generated as well, because people can't tell them apart. The point was that even if AI could imitate Monet perfectly, it's not Monet. It's a worthless test.
setopt•36m ago
Define «original».

Under many definitions, where novel composition of existing knowledge or techniques is counted, it certainly can.

Geee•24m ago
Well, there's the Einstein test: can AI figure out general relativity if it's trained only on knowledge up to 1915 or so, before it was discovered. Similarly, you could do a Monet test: train AI on everything before Monet and try to get it to create paintings similar to Monet.

Original is something that is out of the data distribution. AI can't do anything original, because it's job is to imitate the data distribution.

Originality in itself is not hard, because pure noise is original. It should be original and beautiful.

dormento•25m ago
I loathe the blasted copyright washing machine as much as the next intellectually honest person, but:

> AI can't create anything original.

Can we? I mean, don't we base our output on experience and reprocess references + memories of things past to create what we deem as "new"?

Geee•10m ago
Many artists have a distinct, original style. Originality is the ability to create novelty in a way which is aesthetically pleasing. I've yet to see AI create a single distinct style which is beautiful.
sph•47m ago
AI art enjoyers and missing the point of art: name a better duo.

No one has ever claimed AI cannot imitate a Monet, but however good the imitation, it still isn't art any more than a Xerox of a painting is art. This is the exact reason why most people feel bad after discovering that what they felt was work of human ingenuity, is just a fake, a simulacrum of it. The creation of art, arguably the most human of instincts, cannot be separated from the emotions and effort that went into it.

All this proves is that most people cannot tell if that picture is a Monet or not.

skeledrew•38m ago
> All this proves is that most people cannot tell if that picture is a Monet or not.

It goes beyond that. It proves that many people have an inherent bias against AI itself that's unrelated to whatever it generates. "This was made by AI, therefore it's bad in every way".

_diyar•35m ago
Good points, but consider what this post does prove: people’s arguments against AI art are shallow; they often attack the artifacts themselves instead of making your deeper argument.
petcat•34m ago
> All this proves is that most people cannot tell if that picture is a Monet or not.

It proves that people don't actually know what they like about "art" or even why they think some art is good, and some is bad.

These people criticized and trashed a widely regarded, famous painting because they were told that it was a cheap imitation.

If the AI generated a real imitation and the Met hung it on their walls I guarantee these same people would celebrate it just the same because they are told that it is real.

engeljohnb•31m ago
> It proves that people don't actually know what they like about "art" or even why they think some art is good, and some is bad.

That's because those are famously difficult questions to answer.

engeljohnb•32m ago
I remember this old episode of Doctor Who where the Doctor scoffs at a postcard with the Mona Lisa on it and derides souless "art made by computers."

As a digital artist, of course I rolled my eyes at the time, but these days I just keep thinking about that storyline more and more.

We've basically transitioned to a world where digital art is almost the default, but I think the world is going to value physical art much more highly in the coming years.

jaharios•47m ago
Seems the poster is the one fooled by the AI more than anything, because most likely the bulk of the replies are bots, so you got AI to criticize AI.
jjulius•43m ago
The absolute irony of this comment being the equivalent of the responses to that post.
petcat•39m ago
> Seems the poster is the one fooled by the AI

I think this HN commenter is also being fooled by the AI. It's likely that a lot of comments on HN are bots, so here you got an AI to comment about AI criticizing AI.

mxmilkiib•37m ago
all right, all right, who got a bot to write this comment then?

bzzz, clank

siliconpotato•36m ago
it was all engagement bait to auction off some NFT nonsense.
soared•47m ago
Two interesting replies:

It’s not a physical painting made by a well known artist.

It’s trying to hard to be a late Monet.

How much of our opinions are driven by context, rather than the actual subject? If Monet’s work is not so great without the context, is it still great? Or is context a critical piece of the art itself? Do we need to view a Monet piece within the scope of other Monet pieces, other artists, time periods, blindness, etc?

Semaphor•40m ago
> How much of our opinions are driven by context

I’d say for art, a lot? There’s a ton of art that a halfway decent painter could do now, the art of it was being the one to do it originally. At least that’s how I, as an absolute philistine in that regard, understand it ;)

capibara13•31m ago
Yeah I agree, in art a lot is driven by context: there's so many paintings or songs that are not outstanding in itself, but the full human context around it makes it significant.
card_zero•14m ago
That brings up the idea that art can be "outstanding in itself", aesthetic in a vacuum, disconnected from what people are caring about. That's dubious, but anyway the AI art doesn't attempt that. Instead it has access to a lot of freeze-dried human context which it rehydrates and presents like a fresh meal, so it partially succeeds at providing that significance.
card_zero•26m ago
For an edge case: people will be impressed and interested if you tell them that a piece was painted by an elephant, and then suddenly unimpressed if you tell them you were lying about that. So one function of art is as a sort of experiment, like the art is experimental data, where authenticity matters, because the interest is in the demonstration of a perspective, the reactions of an artist in the situation. Consider noir: a movie is much more plausibly authentic noir if it was made before about 1963, that is, if it was made by actors and directors who actually wore those hats (and lived through other tropes). Later on, it's imitation, regardless of how accurate: the experimental data is invalidated, it doesn't (seem to) mean so much.
input_sh•47m ago
This is like asking people to rate this plate of bugs while serving them chicken. Even if tastes great, of course some people who will have a visceral reaction against it.
ceejayoz•41m ago
But they’re confidently asserting a whole bunch of specific made up reasons this is shittier than a real Monet.

It’s like the sommeliers who can’t detect red vs. white wine when blindfolded.

input_sh•22m ago
People would come up with very specific made up reasons why they hate that plate of chicken as well, so I don't see your point.

As for your red vs. white wine comparison, it'd only make sense if one of those was doing its best to pretend to be the other one.

croes•45m ago
That’s nothing new.

That’s just the art scene already ridiculed in the movie Interstate 60 with James Marsden and Gary Oldman and from 2002

https://youtu.be/HHwI37hkWfM?si=iFsWo3M5oSjLgE2F

Trasmatta•44m ago
I think the more interesting thing going on here is the growing anti-AI sentiment. (Which I very much feel in myself too.)
skeledrew•43m ago
Very good. We need more of these experiments in all areas. Hopefully it helps people to at least be more conscious of their bias.
vld_chk•38m ago
If we learn anything from all studies in this field, that is barely possible if not impossible at all, to change people’s mind. Even when they face clear evidence of their own mistake.
engeljohnb•36m ago
I do think this reveals peoples' biases, but not in the way you probably do.

I think Monet just wasn't as good as his renown purports.

EDIT: I doubt this experiment would go similarly for a Caravaggio or a Michelangelo.

vanviegen•31m ago
Not GP, but I think that's exactly the kind of bias that needs exposing. People are prone to holding a few experts/artists/objects/products in high regarding, defending/denying any flaws, while pushing down on those with less heritage.
functionmouse•42m ago
Cherry picked, contrived, biased; in a word, slop.
drcongo•36m ago
https://xcancel.com/jediwolf/status/2054776716770320631
croisillon•35m ago
1: the answers posted are cherrypicked to prove a speicific point

2: some of the (albeit mislead) answers basically say "it's nice but it's not something a person willingly outlined and drew" and they are not wrong

3: some answers complain on the lack of depth and detail, color blurbs, and we have to agree the tested version is of very low resolution

so in the end we are left with: "some people who were told it was AI knee-jerked negatively" and i can't even start to see what's surprising about it

whattheheckheck•23m ago
You're not surprised that people's judgement seems to be worthless?
croisillon•20m ago
the world is big, a given proportion of people will always behave strangely to the others
capibara13•35m ago
Another sign that the context and the human factor will always play a huge role in how we experience art. For example, AI generated music can sound perfect, but still we value it less if we don't know anything about the musician's life.
helsinkiandrew•31m ago
It's important to remember that there are many Monet paintings that critics don't like, or that aren't 'monet enough'. He painted fast to sell and make money and many think some paintings aren't as finished as they could be. He himself destroyed a number of water lily paintings before an exhibition [1], and again a lot of the work he did when he was partly blind due to cataracts.

[1] https://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28...

whattheheckheck•24m ago
Let this be an example of when you present your own work in real life. Context and framing is everything and does influence its interpretation and how people perceive your work. This has material effects on your life despite nothing objectively changing about the quality of your work.
mcteamster•23m ago
“Made by Claude”
0x_rs•18m ago
NFTbro discovers expectancy effect. This has nothing to do with art nor social experiments, so much so it's actually insulting to one's intelligence.

Math Jokes in Alice in Wonderland

https://storica.club/blog/alice-is-math-jokes/
1•yekbun123•5m ago•0 comments

Life, Death and Rebirth in the Land of the Buddha

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/14/t-magazine/nepal-buddha-kathmandu-buddhism.html
1•jackallis•6m ago•0 comments

CodeWright

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CodeWright
1•BruceEel•11m ago•0 comments

Rising Seas Could Encircle New Orleans by the End of This Century

https://e360.yale.edu/digest/new-orleans-sea-level-rise
1•speckx•12m ago•0 comments

Will Wildfires Spell This the End of the Campfire in Canada?

https://explore-mag.com/is-this-the-end-of-the-campfire-in-canada/
1•kspacewalk2•13m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Symphony: Integrate OpenCode with Linear and get your own dev team

https://github.com/skorokithakis/symphony
1•stavros•14m ago•0 comments

USDA Projects Smallest US Wheat Harvest Since 1972 Due to Plains Drought

https://www.agweb.com/news/usda-projects-smallest-us-wheat-harvest-1972-due-plains-drought
2•littlexsparkee•16m ago•0 comments

The Ackman Act

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EDezDWvB4wsgfhldNc23dNnSc0cZZfK9GZabjVvkyhg/edit?usp=sharing
1•throwawa1•17m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: How do you defend against supply chain attacks today?

3•elric•18m ago•2 comments

Karakeep – self-hostable bookmark-everything app

https://github.com/karakeep-app/karakeep
1•ano-ther•18m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Diffmode – Tool that builds custom growth tactics for bootstrapped SaaS

https://diffmode.app/
1•vanyaland•19m ago•1 comments

Neanderthal Dentists

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0347662
1•johnp314•20m ago•0 comments

Blocking mobile internet on smartphones improves attention and mental health

https://academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/article/4/2/pgaf017/8016017?login=false
2•jabo•22m ago•0 comments

Microsoft's AI system tops Anthropic's Mythos on cybersecurity benchmark

https://www.geekwire.com/2026/microsofts-multi-agent-ai-system-tops-anthropics-mythos-on-cybersec...
1•kseniamorph•23m ago•0 comments

Beware of Drunk Deer, French Police Say, Announcing Season of Inebriation

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/13/world/europe/france-drunk-deer.html
1•bookofjoe•23m ago•1 comments

Why autism pioneer Uta Frith wants to dismantle the spectrum

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2525037-why-autism-pioneer-uta-frith-wants-to-dismantle-the-...
1•donsupreme•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: FreeFax (iOS) – a data point on shipping solo with Claude

https://apps.apple.com/us/app/freefax-send-fax-from-phone/id6763340737
1•joelsfoster•24m ago•0 comments

Hush – local push-to-talk dictation for macOS, no cloud, pastes at cursor

https://github.com/djmunro/hush
1•djmunro•25m ago•0 comments

DiscordMcp: Controlling Servers Through MCP

https://blog.rastrian.dev/post/discordmcp-controlling-servers-through-mcp
1•SchwKatze•25m ago•1 comments

The Whole Anthropic Kerfuffle

https://twitter.com/josevalim/status/2054887621336174799
15•tosh•26m ago•4 comments

Fight Slop with Clarity

https://blog.vtemian.com/post/fight-slop-with-clarity/
1•vtemian•28m ago•0 comments

Release NetHack 5.0 Atari ST/TT/Falcon (WIP)

https://github.com/ingpaschke/NetHack/releases/tag/v5.0-atari-wip
1•ibobev•29m ago•0 comments

Ubuntu 26.04 LTS Moving the Industry Forward with Linux 7.0 and More

https://www.servethehome.com/ubuntu-26-04-lts-moving-the-industry-forward-with-linux-7-0-and-more/
1•PaulHoule•31m ago•0 comments

BrrrViz – Learn GPU Programming

https://brrrviz.com/
2•sebg•31m ago•0 comments

Claude Account Suspended Seconds After Purchase?

3•AnthropicWHAT•32m ago•0 comments

The Third Hard Problem

https://mmapped.blog/posts/48-the-third-hard-problem
2•surprisetalk•33m ago•0 comments

Show HN: The trading terminal that prices everything in gold

https://pricedingoldelite.com
1•rrwilla•33m ago•0 comments

eBay Price Guesser

https://www.eguessr.com/
2•structuredPizza•35m ago•0 comments

56% merge rate on 316 cold OSS PRs in a week

https://github.com/kimjune01
2•kimjune01•36m ago•1 comments

Computer Hobby Movement in Canada

https://museum.eecs.yorku.ca/exhibits/show/hobby_canada/hobby_canada
3•rbanffy•36m ago•0 comments