Artist and illustrator Molly Crabapple discovered in 2022 that AI companies had scraped her distinctive artwork—including illustrations of Aleppo’s skyline and protest portraits—to train image-generation models that now produce crude imitations of her style. Her experience highlights a broader concern among creative professionals who argue that AI threatens artistic livelihoods while degrading the quality of visual content across the internet.
What happened: Crabapple led a workshop in Manhattan’s Lower East Side called “Artists Against the Slop Beast,” where she and tech editor Edward Ongweso Jr. outlined strategies for resisting AI adoption in creative industries.
The big picture: Silicon Valley executives predict AI will eliminate half of entry-level white-collar jobs and push unemployment to 10-20% within five years, but Crabapple argues this technological takeover isn’t inevitable.
What they’re saying: Crabapple describes the fundamental disconnect between AI developers and creative workers.
Industry impact: Several illustrators in Crabapple’s network have struggled to find work as companies increasingly use AI prompts instead of hiring human artists or photographers to reduce costs.
How to fight back: The workshop outlined practical resistance strategies for organizations and individuals.
Political context: The Trump administration has embraced AI-generated content, using it for memes targeting Black voters and supporting Immigration and Customs Enforcement deportation efforts, while resisting regulations for AI companies.
Broader adoption: AI programs have become integrated across the internet, answering search queries, writing student essays, and serving as virtual therapists, while critics argue they steal copyrighted content and diminish human creativity.
Community response: Crabapple’s 2023 open letter urging publishers and journalists to reject generative AI has garnered more than 4,000 signatures from supporters in the creative industry.