– 62% of participants reported they would like a piece of art less if it were entirely AI-created, while 32% said their feelings wouldn’t change, and nearly 5% said they’d like it more.
– Respondents expressed concerns about emotional depth in AI-generated art but were more accepting if human artists had significant involvement through guiding prompts or tools.
– On whether users of AI should be considered artists:
– ~42% believed “Yes, only with significant guidance to the AI.”
– ~31% said “No.”
– Remaining participants were split between outright approval or uncertainty.
The findings reflect broader global debates about the evolving role of artificial intelligence within creative industries. For India-a country rich with both customary heritage arts and rapidly growing digital media-the intersection of technology with cultural preservation poses unique challenges and opportunities.
On one hand, democratizing access to creativity through cost-effective consumer-grade technology could remove barriers for aspiring Indian film producers, writers, visual artists who often face funding obstacles.Simultaneously though-as echoed in survey responses-it may drive conversations on maintaining emotional depth rooted in human stories which form a central theme of India’s cultural output spanning Bollywood storytelling melodramas Akshay Kumar Vs brief contradictory stochicent via financiamento read user textpieces Afro X