First published: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/valuing-human-creativity-age-ai-meena-chopra-meena-chopra-ktmse/
In 2026, the boundary between human creativity and digital intelligence has finally started evaporating into the shadows. We are weaving high contrasts with abstract AI textures to bring timeless art into a new dimension of sight and sound.
There are moments in history when language begins to shift under our feet. Words that once felt stable, art, creation, authorship, originality, begin to blur as new tools enter the landscape of making. Artificial intelligence is one such threshold. This is not a question of acceptance or rejection; it is a question of clarity: what remains essentially human in the act of creation, and where does technology genuinely belong without displacing that essence?
1. Art as Experience, Not Consumption
In contemporary market language, art is often described as something to be consumed, bought, or distributed. But this framing feels incomplete. From an aesthetic perspective, art is not consumed; it is experienced, received, and realized. This distinction is not semantic; it is foundational. Consumption implies depletion. Experience implies transformation. Art, at its deepest level, does not diminish upon being seen and experienced; it unfolds within the one who receives it. A work of art is not exhausted by being seen; it continues to act within consciousness long after the moment of first experience.
2. The Inner Movement of Creation
Every act of creation begins not in tools, a brush, a pen, technology, or AI, but in a subtle inner movement: an impulse, a disturbance, or a silence that demands expression. At times, the artist enters a state where thought dissolves and making becomes almost instinctive. The subconscious takes over; form arises before language. This is not technique; it is presence. In this state, something essential occurs: the self is not merely producing an object; it is revealing something through itself.
3. The Source of Creativity
The source of creativity is not purely intellectual. It is a convergence of memory, sensation, culture, emotion, and awareness itself. In many Indian philosophical traditions, this is understood as the witnessing consciousness, or sākṣhī. This idea appears across Vedānta, Sāṃkhya philosophy, where puruṣa is the witnessing principle and yogic traditions of detachment. In these frameworks, awareness is the silent observer in which experience arises, unfolds, and dissolves. AI does not possess this witnessing dimension. It processes patterns, but it does not experience meaning. This difference is crucial.
4. Art as Process and Transformation
Art is often treated as a finished object, yet its deeper reality lies in process. The act of making transforms the maker, and when seen and experienced deeply, it transforms the receiver as well. There is a subtle “aha” moment in true artistic seeing, an unspoken recognition that alters perception. In this sense, art is not merely something made; it is something that happens between beings.
5. Art, Commerce, and Reduction
Art exists within the material world, and artists must live within it. However, there is a distinction between exchange and reduction. When art is reduced solely to a commodity, its interiority is lost. This is not a rejection of livelihood, but a caution against collapsing meaning into market function. Art is not diminished by being valued materially; it is diminished when stripped of its experiential depth and treated only as a product.
6. Technology and the Layers of Expression
At the most fundamental level, creative practice can be understood through two interrelated layers:
- Inner layer: Intention, witnessing, necessity.
- Outer layer: Tools, materials, technologies.
This distinction is essential. The inner layer is where art originates; the outer layer is where it takes form. Technology belongs to the outer layer of expression. It may shape form and expand possibility, but it does not originate from the inner necessity from which art arises.
This relationship between art and technology is not merely theoretical. It has been part of ongoing dialogue. An AI lens also emerged during the Charismatic Chiaroscuro discussion at the India International Centre, New Delhi, on 27th November 2025 during my book tour to India. The perspective was articulated by Sunil Gujral, an international expert in software and artificial intelligence, during book discussion at India International Centre New Delhi. The exchange opened a parallel inquiry, one that examined technology not as opposition, but as a shifting layer within the evolving language of art. Video Link: https://youtu.be/W394HdfaBOs
7. AI and the Question of Authorship
Artificial intelligence introduces a new layer into creative practice. But its role must be understood clearly. Alongside philosophical questions, there are also pressing ethical and legal concerns that cannot be ignored and be dealt with strongly. Recent legal challenges across the creative industries reflect growing concern about how AI systems are developed. Lawsuits filed between 2023 and 2024, including those by the The New York Times against OpenAI and Microsoft, as well as claims brought by authors such as Sarah Silverman, Paul Tremblay, and Mona Awad have raised fundamental questions about the use of copyrighted material in training large-scale models. Similar concerns have been expressed by organizations like the Authors Guild and companies such as Getty Images in their case against Stability AI. While many of these cases remain unresolved, they point to a rapidly evolving legal landscape where questions of consent, compensation, and authorship are still being defined.
It is useful to distinguish between two layers of concern:
1. Ethical and legal (structural and necessary)
- Was data used fairly?
- Were creators compensated?
- Are outputs impacting livelihoods?
These are valid concerns and require thoughtful responses through policy, regulation, and new frameworks.
2. Creative and philosophical (experiential and foundational)
- Where does creativity originate?
- What defines authorship?
- What constitutes art?
The critical question is not whether AI is used, but where intention, selection, and judgment reside. AI may generate form, suggest variations, or assist in transformation. However, it does not originate intent, nor does it exercise responsibility. Authorship lies in the artist’s capacity to choose, to refuse, to shape, and to conclude. Imitation alone is not the issue. Real concern arises when decision-making itself is unethically displaced.
8. Assistive AI vs. Generative Substitution
A clearer distinction emerges here:
- Assistive AI: Supports an artist-led process (editing, transformation, expansion of existing material).
- Generative AI: Produces outputs independently from prompts or datasets.
The ethical question is not one of use versus non-use, but whether the artist remains the origin of intent and the active locus of selection.
9. Case Study: Continuum of a Single Artwork (1985–2026)
Art begins inwardly and becomes outward form. It then returns inward again through perception. It is a continuous loop between interior experience and external expression. Technology belongs to the outer layer of expression. It may shape form and expand possibility, but it does not originate from the inner necessity from which art arises.
To ground these ideas, I refer to one continuous work of mine, A Death, A Beginning, which has evolved across time.
1985 — Origin Gesture called Fire Ball
An abstract artwork created in 1985 then called Fire Ball, marked the beginning of my exploration into abstract art. At this stage, the work emerged from an intuitive, non-linear engagement with form and inner perception. It was not conceived as a completed statement, but as an opening into a larger visual language.
2015 — Re-engagement and Transformation:
Three decades later, the same work was revisited in 2015. It was reinterpreted, expanded, and placed into a new conceptual frame through the addition of poetry. I called it A Death, A Beginning. This phase was also presented in a curated exhibition the in 2016 at Bradley Museum in a group show called "DEATH BECOMES US". Here, the work evolved from a visual exploration into a dialogue between image and language, memory and reflection.
2026 — Present Layer, Technological Re-reading (AI-assisted context):
In its current phase, 2026, the work is being revisited through available digital and AI-assisted tools. Importantly, this is not a replacement of authorship, but a re-seeing of an already existing creative trajectory through a new technological lens. The original intent remains intact, while the mode of perception and transformation expands through contemporary tools. I call it 'Painting the Void' now.This continuum demonstrates that the artwork is not a fixed object, but an evolving relationship between origin, reinterpretation, and technological mediation.
"The light was always there, only the layers changed."
Conclusion: What Remains Human
Human creativity is defined not by exclusive control over tools, but by the presence of intention, awareness, and lived experience. Your brush, your pen can change into something more modern like tech-tool-AI but not your intent and awareness. The machine can generate endlessly, but it does not witness meaning. Art, in its deepest sense, is not merely production of a commodity. It is a way of becoming aware through form.
At a personal level, my own practice has never been product-based; it is process-based. The work does not begin with the intention to produce (a commodity), but with an inner movement that unfolds over time. This distinction shapes how I relate to emerging technologies. Artificial intelligence does not disturb the origin of my creativity, as long as authorship and intention remain intact. It enters not as a replacement, but as a tool within the outer layer of expression.
#technology #AIart #digitalart #creativity
For my poetry kindly Visit: English: http://ignitedlines.blogspot.com Hindi: http://ignitedlines.blogspot.com/ website: http://meenachopra17.wix.com/meena-chopra-artist
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