courtesy of Instagram/@aidarobotArt & PhotographyNewsThe AI artist Ai-Da has made over £1 million ahead of its first solo showThe humanoid will exhibit at Oxford University’s Barn Gallery June 12ShareLink copied ✔️June 8, 2019Art & PhotographyNewsTextThom Waite Working in a creative industry, you might have been forgiven for thinking that your job is relatively secured against automation, but it’s becoming increasingly clear that no one is safe. There’s been a slew of artificial-intelligence-generated works in recent years, across all disciplines, but no robot sums up the advances better than Ai-Da, the world’s first humanoid AI artist. Ai-Da – a creepily lifelike robot with hyperreal hair, skin, and British accent – will have its first, groundbreaking solo exhibition on June 12, at the Barn Gallery (part of Oxford University). The show will be aptly titled “Unsecured Futures”. As for the art itself, Ai-Da only works in pen or pencil at the moment, with a human painting over the top when the drawings are printed on canvas. Still, its pretty impressive stuff: Ai-Da can actually sketch someone sitting in front of it using cameras in its eyes, which flick between the page and the subject, even blinking (spooky). “It’s a really exciting process never been done before in the way that we’ve done it,” Aidan Meller, the gallerist and inventor of Ai-Da tells Reuters. “We don’t know exactly how the drawings are going to turn out and that’s really important.” Meller doesn’t only have the technological achievement to celebrate, though. “It’s a sold out show with over a million pounds worth of artworks sold,” he says. Which does make you wonder if it would have been better to put the money (and exhibition space) towards real artists from, say, backgrounds that are still often overlooked in the art world. Nevertheless, it’s easy to see the appeal of artworks created at the cutting edge of AI tech. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREDazed Club explore surrealist photography and soundDerek Ridgers’ portraits of passionate moments in publicThe rise and fall (and future) of digital artThis print sale is supporting Jamaica after Hurricane MelissaThese photos trace a diasporic archive of transness7 Studio Museum artworks you should see for yourselfNadia Lee Cohen on her ‘most personal project yet’ Candid photos from a Paris strip club locker roomLiz Johnson Arthur immortalises PDA, London’s iconic queer POC club nightThis ‘Sissy Institute’ show explores early trans internet cultureLife lessons from the legendary artist Greer LanktonPhotos of Medellín’s raw, tender and fearless skateboarding culture