A recent social media experiment by artist SHL0MS exposed something deeper than just another online argument about AI art — it revealed how strongly perception now shapes artistic judgment.
The setup was simple.
SHL0MS posted an image online and claimed it was AI-generated in the style of famed impressionist painter Claude Monet. He then challenged users to explain, in detail, why the “AI image” was inferior.
The internet responded exactly as expected.
Thousands of comments poured in criticizing the artwork:
- “Emotionless”
- “Soulless”
- “AI slop”
- “Flat composition”
- “Bad reflections”
- “No depth”
- “Lacks human feeling”
There was just one problem.
The image was not AI-generated at all.
It was an authentic Monet painting from the famous Water Lilies series, created around 1915.
The Experiment Wasn’t About Monet
The painting itself was almost irrelevant.
What mattered was the label.
The moment viewers believed the image came from AI, many immediately switched into critique mode — actively searching for flaws, artificiality, and emotional emptiness. The exact same image, if presented honestly as a Monet masterpiece, would likely have received admiration instead of ridicule.
That reaction says a lot about the current state of the creative industry.
Today, “AI-generated” often functions less as a technical description and more as an emotional trigger.
For many artists, designers, writers, and creatives, AI represents:
- automation,
- disruption,
- loss of identity,
- economic anxiety,
- or even cultural replacement.
As a result, discussions around AI art are increasingly driven by assumptions before the work itself is even evaluated.
The Psychology Behind the Reaction
Interestingly, this phenomenon is not just anecdotal.
Research from Norwegian academics in 2024 found that people frequently rated AI-generated artwork positively when they did not know its origin — but once told the work was AI-created, their perception dropped significantly.
In other words:
people often dislike the idea of AI art more than the art itself.
This is a classic cognitive bias problem.
Humans rarely judge creative work in a vacuum. Context matters:
- the artist’s identity,
- the perceived effort,
- the story behind the work,
- and now increasingly, whether AI was involved.
The Monet incident simply made that bias visible in public.
The Creative World Is Entering a New Era
This backlash is understandable.
AI is rapidly changing creative workflows across:
- illustration,
- music,
- writing,
- film,
- software development,
- animation,
- photography,
- and design.
Many creators fear being replaced or devalued.
But history shows that major technological shifts almost always trigger resistance before normalization:
- photography disrupted painting,
- digital art disrupted traditional illustration,
- synthesizers disrupted music production,
- desktop publishing disrupted print design.
AI is now the next disruption layer.
The tension comes from the fact that AI challenges something deeply personal: the belief that creativity is uniquely human.
The Real Question Isn’t “AI vs Human”
The Monet-gate experiment accidentally revealed a more important truth:
People are increasingly reacting to labels instead of evaluating the work itself.
That creates a dangerous environment where:
- assumptions replace analysis,
- outrage replaces curiosity,
- and tribal identity replaces artistic discussion.
The future of creativity likely won’t be purely human or purely AI.
It will be collaborative.
Artists who learn how to direct, refine, and integrate AI tools may become more powerful creators — not lesser ones. Meanwhile, audiences will eventually need to develop more nuanced ways of judging authenticity, originality, and craftsmanship in an AI-assisted world.
Because if thousands of people can mistake a real Monet for “AI slop,” the conversation clearly isn’t just about art anymore.
It’s about perception, fear, identity, and the uncomfortable speed of technological change.
