The bit I don't get about AI art is that what I chase after in my own work is the *doing*.

Finding a -flow- where I can kind of see a thing in my head, start working towards it, and it changes continuously as I tell myself a narrative behind what I'm making.

AI art is like instead of going out for an evening with friends, talking, and a great meal followed by dessert then lazing about in a park swearing at bats - you press a button and suddenly you're so full you could burst and have rabies.

@NanoRaptor well because the process doesn't matter to those who look for art purely in commodity-form, which sadly constitutes most of the economic base of the art market. the margins are much higher in producing bulk amounts of low quality art used in advertising and such than for artisans types doing self expression