Will AI Take Over Creative Jobs? – Parametric Architecture

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AI-generated Art © Freepik

The world is evolving at an unprecedented pace, with technology becoming an integral part of almost every field, reshaping the way we live, work, and create. In the realm of creativity, tools like ChatGPT and DALL·E 2 are leading a quiet revolution, allowing anyone—from seasoned professionals to novices—to produce intricate designs, compelling stories, research papers, and stunning visuals in a matter of seconds. What once required days, weeks, or even months of human effort can now be accomplished almost instantly, with AI-generated results that often rival, and sometimes even surpass, human-made creations.

However, the AI revolution often makes us question if we are witnessing the end of creative professions as we know them. Will AI render human ingenuity obsolete, transforming creativity into a mere algorithmic function? Or will it serve as a powerful tool that augments and enhances human creativity?

What is Creativity?

AI-generated Architecture © Hasan Ragab

Creativity involves approaching tasks in new ways, generating unique solutions through innovative thinking. It is characterized by a fresh perspective, openness to new ideas, and the ability to see connections where others may not. Creativity is typically divided into three modes: exploratory, combinational, and transformational.

Exploratory creativity involves open and unstructured exploration of ideas, characterized by curiosity and experimentation. This mode is useful during the early stages of problem-solving, where brainstorming and mind mapping help generate multiple possibilities.

Combinational creativity revolves around merging diverse, seemingly unrelated elements to create something original. This approach thrives in cross-disciplinary collaborations, where new ideas emerge from blending various concepts or technologies.

Transformational focuses on reimagining existing ideas or elements in novel ways. Artists, for example, often take familiar themes and reinterpret them to produce fresh, innovative forms.

These forms of creativity often overlap, and the creative process is typically a dynamic blend of all three.

AI Creativity Evaluation

Exploratory Creativity

© Deep Dream Generator

AI, like ChatGPT, can rapidly generate a multitude of ideas. For instance, asking AI for alternative uses for a water bottle might yield hundreds of suggestions within seconds. While the usefulness of these ideas may vary, the sheer speed of generation can spark inspiration and overcome challenges like writer’s block. The role of the human, however, remains critical in filtering and refining these ideas.

While AI can assist in exploratory creativity, human experience and emotional context often produce more nuanced and relevant ideas. Rather than replacing the human role, AI accelerates the initial brainstorming process, freeing up time for deeper, more complex creative thinking.

For example, the infamous writer’s block may be overcome with AI intervention, where AI can help a writer engage in idea exploration. While the ideas may not be unique enough, the speed at which AI can derive new scenarios and contexts may facilitate writers’ transition to their creativity mode. In addition, their creative eye becomes critical in directing AI and curating promising ideas.

Combinational Creativity 

via Midjourney © Hasan Ragab

Combinational creativity is the most prevalent form of creativity since using existing ideas to create something new has always been a common approach to innovation. 

AI can help explore infinite topics and fields in a matter of minutes and helps find common grounds or connections between them, reflecting a common aspect in seemingly irrelevant topics. AI can boost combinational creativity by synthesizing large data sets or blending information from various sources. However, it requires some wit and curiosity to direct AI toward finding connections between seemingly unrelated fields, reflecting AI’s dependence on creative minds for guidance.  

Entrepreneurs often work on finding gaps in specific industries and combining ideas from divergent fields to fill the gap and find a scalable solution. In this sense, AI can help in the exploration process of each field and industry and, eventually, with the guidance of innovative minds, help find connections that result in novel solutions and products.

Architects and designers, for example, use AI to combine global design influences, advanced materials, and sustainability measures to create groundbreaking designs. AI assists in the synthesis, but human ingenuity drives the final creative leap.

Transformational Creativity 

AI-generated City © Deep Dream Generator

At the moment, it seems like AI cannot create something entirely new. While AI can assist in recombining and altering pre-existing data or reworking images and text, it may struggle with the deep emotional or cultural recontextualization that defines human transformational creativity. It can produce variations of what it has learned but cannot conceptualize new ideas independently. 

Filmmakers and directors often reimagine well-known genres or stories, offering a unique take on familiar narratives or cinematic conventions. However, making the needed reinterpretations based on culture and prevalent issues and themes is a skill only humans possess. The help of AI can stimulate the exploration of ideas as a starting point, but finding abstract representations and metaphors for these concepts is an arduous task that only very creative individuals are capable of.

Limitations and Potential of AI 

AI-generated Collage Art © Freepik

Based on the previous analysis, it is evident that AI lacks emotional intelligence, which is reflected in human nature’s unique experiences and emotions. AI also lacks the ability to comprehend and analyze cultural and social contexts and human needs, often driving creative work and innovation. 

However, AI can quickly generate large quantities of creative work and automate repetitive tasks in creative industries. This means that more time can be invested in creativity and the creative solution. Time is money and effort; the more efficiently we use time in the creative process, the better the results. 

AI can also be used as a tool to push creativity beyond its limits. It can be used to create the unimaginable and transform what is intangible into tangible by opening up untapped sources of creativity. 

One can always experiment with new AI tools and see how they inspire or trigger their creativity. AI can also enhance human creativity and intelligence. A recent study showed that an improvement in the players’ performance was observed in countries where chess players had access to computer chess simulations. This suggests that working with AI models can push humans to become more creative and imaginative, not just in fields like design but even across various disciplines.

Will AI Take Over Creative Jobs?

© Freepik

AI has proven that it is of great help in the creative process. Firms like Zaha Hadid Architects leverage AI-driven parametric design tools to explore futuristic, organic building forms that balance aesthetic appeal with structural efficiency. In product design, generative software allows designers to input specific parameters and generate optimized solutions. AI is also making waves in fashion, helping designers blend historical styles with modern trends to create unique clothing designs.

However, even with AI, not everyone can be truly creative. To AI, all creative inputs and outputs are merely data. AI cannot tell whether what it generates from that data is useful. Thus, our role is to work with the data and results for idea selection and filtration. Only a genuinely creative mind can spot a good idea and further develop it out of the endless options AI can give. Idea curation will then become an essential skill for everyone who wants to be creative. 

AI-generated Poem – via theday.co,uk

Shakespeare had a purpose when he compared his love to a summer’s dream, understanding the emotions and meaning behind the imagery. In contrast, when AI generates a poem, it does not understand why such comparisons are made. This highlights the irreplaceable human touch, filled with intent and emotion, which makes creativity unique and special in a way AI cannot replicate and reflects why human intervention and intuition will be needed to generate creative output. This also indicates that learning how to communicate your ideas clearly with AI will become a new aspect and form of creativity, and businesses, artists, and designers who can master the art of communicating with AI will be in the lead.

Lastly, it is essential to highlight that AI can produce anything you want, but it cannot create what you truly need. Creativity and innovation also lie in understanding the world’s needs and reflecting on society, industry, and technology. Creative minds are self- and product-driven, but AI is consumer-centric and market-driven – we only get the art or ideas we ask for, which are not what we necessarily need. Thus, creative and innovative individuals capable of understanding the world’s needs can find methods to work with AI to boost their productivity and the effectiveness and impact of their work. 

AI will not take over creative jobs but will redefine them. Repetitive and low-level tasks may be automated, allowing more time for higher-level creative thinking. New roles will emerge, focusing on collaboration between humans and AI to maximize creative output. The future of creativity is not in jeopardy—rather, it is evolving into something even more dynamic and innovative.

Does AI’s Integration with Creativity Have Any Drawbacks? 

AI-generated Digital Art © Freepik

As AI becomes more ingrained in our lives, we must address its potential drawbacks. Over-reliance on AI could lead to a decline in fundamental skills like deep research, critical thinking, and curiosity. Without the traditional research process, which sparks creativity through exploration and learning, we risk losing some of the essential elements that drive innovation.

However, this risk can be managed by integrating AI training and education into our current educational systems and the creative industry. 

Incorporating AI into our creative processes is no longer a choice but a necessity. As long as we continue to develop our own creative abilities and learn how to work alongside AI, the future of creativity will remain bright and full of possibilities.