The Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas just hosted a controversial exhibition featuring entirely AI-generated art. Some pieces sold for $15,000+. The DFW art community is split.
What happened: The exhibition, titled "Synthetic Visions," ran for two weeks in February 2026. It featured 40 pieces created using Midjourney, DALL-E 3, and Stable Diffusion by 12 "artists" who described their process as "prompt engineering and curation." The Nasher framed it as exploring the intersection of technology and creativity.
The backlash:
- Deep Ellum gallery owners signed an open letter calling it "an insult to working artists."
- Several DFW artists protested outside the opening. Their argument: AI models were trained on millions of copyrighted artworks without permission or compensation.
- The Dallas Observer ran an editorial calling the exhibition "the beginning of the end of art as human expression."
The defense:
- The curator argued that photography faced the same criticism when it emerged. Painters said cameras would kill art. They were wrong.
- The "artists" said they spent hundreds of hours refining prompts, selecting outputs, and composing final pieces. That curation IS the art.
- One piece that sold for $18,000 was a composite of 200+ AI-generated images manually assembled and painted over.
The legal question:
- The US Copyright Office currently says purely AI-generated works cannot be copyrighted (Thaler v. Perlmutter, 2023).
- Works with "sufficient human authorship" in selection and arrangement may qualify.
- This means AI art exists in a legal gray zone that has not been fully resolved.
My take: The tool does not determine whether something is art. A cheap camera can create a masterpiece. Expensive oil paints can create garbage. The question is whether the human behind the tool made meaningful creative decisions. Some AI "artists" clearly do. Most do not.
Sources:
- Nasher Sculpture Center exhibition catalog, February 2026
- Dallas Observer — editorial, February 12, 2026
- US Copyright Office — AI and Copyright guidance (copyright.gov)
- Thaler v. Perlmutter (D.D.C. 2023)
Where do you land on this?
I was at the exhibition. Some pieces were genuinely stunning. One artist combined AI output with hand-painted elements and the result was unlike anything I have seen. Dismissing ALL AI art as "not real" is just as lazy as typing a prompt and calling it art.