AI Art Made Me Worry Less About Creating Art of My Own
Generative art has its place but it doesn’t replace the feeling of creating something yourself

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I’ve always been an artsy person, but not the best artist ever. I’ve always just had fun with it, you know?
So when I first started playing around with DALL-E and Midjourney when they came out, it got me panicking.
In a sentence I could make the AI do anything I could picture in my head.
As someone who frequently imagined a concept and then failed to put it on paper without it looking like a 5 year old had attacked the crayon pot, this was a game changer.
Let me be clear — I love what AI can create. I use it a lot for post images right here on Medium, for avatars, phone wallpapers, and more. It’s incredible.
But I’d always been taught you have to do art in the traditional way; study colour theory, perspectives, use your pencils the ‘right’ way. My father was an artist and, as it happens, a narcissist, so he made it very clear to me from a young age that he was ‘better’ at art and unless I did it properly, I shouldn’t bother trying.
And I never enjoyed art like that. I just want to scribble and doodle and make something funny.
So generative AI art felt a bit personal to me.
If a machine could do art better than me, what was the point in trying?
Why I don’t feel like that any more
After hours of playing around with AI art tools, it’s positively changed the way I feel about making art.
Sure, Leonardo AI can make portraits can looks indistinguishable from a photo, and Midjourney can render an authentic watercolour landscape. It’s amazing at fantasy style art, too — something I’ve never been able to create myself.

But it all feels a bit… disconnected. I know AI art has its place but typing a prompt in a box with keywords is nothing like the physical act of scribbling on paper, splodging paint into a palette, or even drawing with a digital art tool like Procreate.
Another thing is the way AI art looks. It’s almost too perfect…
I like a bit of rustic, organic feeling in art. I like to see scratchy lines, warped perspective, and textures that only a person could create.
There’s no doubt AI art can be stunning.
But as an artist, or I guess, a ‘scribbler’, AI art isn’t meant to replace the journey of creating art by hand.
It’s got its place, sure, but it can never take away the meditative, joyful act of creating art.
Even if it’s not ‘proper’.

Hugs,
Fran Holly 🌺🎴✨





