Author(s): Mark Stanley
Abstract: This essay revisits Walter Benjamin’s 1935 essay, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, to frame the contemporary proliferation of images in the age of social media and artificial intelligence—an age of algorithmic reproduction. It examines how Benjamin’s ideas about aura, authenticity, and authorship are relevant to generative AI and platforms like Instagram, and extends his arguments into contemporary techno-cultural contexts. The essay draws on writing of McKenzie Wark, Benjamin Bratton, and Helen Hester, as well as older media theory such as Marshall McLuhan and Roland Barthes, to reflect on shifting boundaries between authors and audiences, the planetary scale of media infrastructure, and the convergence of human and machine creative intelligence. Finally, the essay makes a case for architects and designers, as image-makers, to navigate this new visual landscape, leveraging their role in shaping emerging forms of synthetic intelligence and visual culture.
https://doi.org/10.35483/ACSA.AM.113.19
Volume Editors
Sara Jensen Carr & Rubén García Rubio
ISBN
978-1-944214-48-7
Study Architecture
ProPEL
