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We live in a time where the rise of artificial intelligence has challenged the way we think about creativity. AI art generators can produce images at breathtaking speed, often mimicking styles that artists have spent years refining. It is tempting to believe that this signals a new era where machines dominate the creative space. Yet I am convinced that the trend of AI art will not last in the way some predict. When the novelty fades, people will rediscover what truly matters: human connection.
Abstract art in particular thrives on this connection. Unlike representational art, which shows us something familiar, abstraction takes us into an emotional and interpretive space. It is art that asks us to feel, to reflect, and to search for meaning. No algorithm, however advanced, can replicate the lived experiences, emotions and subtle imperfections that give human-created abstract work its power. I believe we will eventually see a strong cultural shift towards valuing what is real. In a future saturated with digital simulations and machine-generated aesthetics, authenticity will become a rare and treasured quality. Perhaps we will even see the introduction of a "human authentication" stamp, a seal that validates a piece as the product of genuine human effort, thought and emotion. Such a mark would not only distinguish human art from AI but would also stand as a reminder of the irreplaceable value of human creativity. Looking further ahead, I see a world where human-created abstract art becomes more deeply intertwined with wellbeing. As society becomes more aware of the mental and emotional challenges of the digital age, art that resonates on a human level will be sought as a grounding force. Abstract works, with their open forms and emotional resonance, will become part of how we reconnect with ourselves and each other. We may also witness a change in how art is collected and experienced. Rather than pursuing endless streams of cheap, machine-made imagery, collectors and audiences will gravitate toward unique, human stories. The provenance of a work will matter more than ever. Who made it, why it was created, and what emotional truth it holds will be the deciding factors. The future of art is not about competing with AI on speed or volume. It is about leaning into what makes us human. The brushstroke, the camera movement, the intuition of a moment, the embrace of imperfection — these are qualities that no machine can replicate. As AI fills our world with surface-level images, abstract art will endure as a space for depth, mystery and genuine human expression. In the end, the future of abstract art will be a return to the fundamentals: creativity, emotion and connection. Technology may shift the landscape, but the heartbeat of art will remain human.
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AuthorChris Melville is an award-winning abstract photographer based in Auckland, NZ. Archives
November 2025
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