Aperture No. 257 - Winter 2024

Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI

Aperture presents “Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI,” a timely and urgent issue that explores how artificial intelligence is quickly transforming the field of photography and our broader culture of images.

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Aperture presents “Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI,” a timely and urgent issue that explores how artificial intelligence is quickly transforming the field of photography and our broader culture of images. Moving beyond hype and hysteria, the essays, interviews, and artist portfolios in this issue provide a crucial resource for understanding the ways in which this fast-evolving technology is reshaping photography’s relationship to creativity, authorship, and truth.

To weigh the risks and possibilities of this transformative change, Aperture has turned to some of the leading thinkers in the field. Artist Trevor Paglen and researcher Kate Crawford demystify the “intelligence” of AI and outline its threats to privacy, democracy, and the planet. Pioneering media theorist Fred Ritchin and journalist Brian Palmer unravel the implications of artificial intelligence on the photographer’s role as a credible witness. Cultural critic Nora N. Khan explains why we need new criteria to interpret generative images. Rob Horning argues for a more complex understanding of photography’s relationship to reality, exposing how the idea of a “real photo” has always been incoherent, while Peter J. Karol delves into the bizarre realm of AI copyright law, examining the unlikely precedents used to develop legal frameworks in the United States.

“The field of photography continually shifts due to emergent technologies, and AI is a big one,” says Michael Famighetti, Aperture’s editor in chief. “It felt important for us to assemble some of the leading voices grappling with the questions, ideas, opportunities, risks, and problems posed by AI. These issues are significant, and they are here to stay. We hope this issue will be a useful reference and resource for our readers.”

“Image Worlds to Come” looks at the past as much as the future. Art historian Noam M. Elcott and technologist Tim Trombley train their own AI model on the Farm Security Administration’s vast and storied archive, mimicking photographers like Dorothea Lange and Gordon Parks with revelatory precision. Artist Minne Atairu examines the racial biases of AI systems in beguiling portraits and imagined continuations of the contested Benin Bronzes, exposing how legacies of colonialism are perpetuated in the datasets of mainstream platforms like Midjourney. And photographer Charlie Engman contributes a portfolio of indelible “cursed images” inspired by a feeling of being “nostalgic for the present.”

The cover of Aperture issue 257 features a work by Trevor Paglen from his 2017 series It Began as a Military Experiment. The project, focusing on machine learning, consists of images taken of US military employees in the mid-1990s that the Department of Defense used to train early facial recognition software, technology that is now embedded in everyday life.

“Photography is the paradigm of human-technology interfaces,” Paglen tells art historian Sarah M. Miller in an extensive interview. “People who think critically about photographs have a great deal to contribute, in terms of trying to conceive of and implement the kind of world that we want to live in, because the world is increasingly hard to distinguish from photography.”

“Image Worlds to Come” begins to map a transformative moment for the medium, as we enter an era that will require us to look harder and deeper at photographs than ever before.

Format: Paperback / softback
Number of pages: 160
Number of images: 0
Publication date: 2024-12-01
Measurements: 8.5 x 10.6 inches
ISBN: 9781597115698


Support has been provided by members of Aperture’s Magazine Council: Jon Stryker and Slobodan Randjelovic, Susan and Thomas Dunn, Kate Cordsen and Denis O’Leary, and Michael W. Sonnenfeldt, MUUS Collection.

Table Of Contents

Features

EDITORS’ NOTE
Image Worlds to Come: Photography & AI

WAYS OF SEEING
Trevor Paglen’s art unravels the politics of computer vision
A conversation with Sarah M. Miller

METABOLIC IMAGES
Is there time to rethink artificial intelligence?
A conversation between Kate Crawford and Paola Antonelli

GENERATIVE STYLE
What FSA photography can teach us about AI
Noam M. Elcott and Tim Trombley

DEEP REALS
What is realism in the age of AI?
Rob Horning

MODEL STUDIES
The beguiling beauty of Minne Atairu’s generative portraits
Tiana Reid

THE SIMULATED CAMERA
Documentary photography at a crossroads
A conversation between Fred Ritchin and Brian Palmer

GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE
Inside the bizarre world of AI copyright law
Peter J. Karol

CURSED IMAGES
Charlie Engman transforms the internet’s murk into art
Travis Diehl

Columns

AGENDA
Rineke Dijkstra, Letizia Battaglia, Digital Witness, Mame-Diarra Niang

BACKSTORY
Christina Cacouris on Tina Barney’s home movies

VIEWFINDER
Aaron Peck on the enduring ephemera of student protest

REDUX
Gioncarlo Valentine on Steven Cuffie’s 1970s Baltimore portraits

TIMELINE
Audrey Sands on a history of flash photography

STUDIO VISIT
Roxy Merrell on the whimsical worlds of Ruth van Beek

CURRICULUM
Sabiha Çimen on twins, Doris Salcedo, and a bejeweled tea service

ENDNOTE
Jesse Krimes on his show at the Met

The PhotoBook Review

THE ART OF THE BOOK
Aaron Schuman speaks with the designer Hans Gremmen

SMALLER PLEASURES
Megan N. Liberty on the shrinking size of photobooks

SELF-PORTRAITS IN TIME
An interview with Rosalind Fox Solomon

Reviews of photobooks by Tee A. Corinne, Yasuhiro Ishimoto, Abdulhamid Kircher, Aspen Mays, and more


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