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Joseph Nathan Cohen

Sociologist at Queens College in the City University of New York

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Constructivism

How generative AI renders Constructivism: thin and thick prompts compared across two subjects.

AI Art Styles

This entry documents how a generative image model rendered Constructivism when the movement was named in a prompt. It forms part of a survey of 60 art movements generated in February 2024.

The images

Two subjects are held constant across the series: Lake Kenogamissi in Northern Ontario, and Times Square in New York City. Each is rendered twice. A thin prompt names the movement and nothing else. A thick prompt supplies a generated description of the movement’s visual characteristics.

Lake Kenogamissi
Constructivism, Lake Kenogamissi, thin prompt
Thin prompt
Constructivism, Lake Kenogamissi, thick prompt
Thick prompt
Times Square
Constructivism, Times Square, thin prompt
Thin prompt
Constructivism, Times Square, thick prompt
Thick prompt

The thick descriptor

The following description was generated by GPT-4 and supplied to the image model as the thick prompt.

Constructivism is marked by abstract, geometrical structures often made from modern materials like steel and glass. Sharp angles, intersecting planes, and bold, primary colors are common. To create constructivist art, build a composition with non-representational geometric forms, focusing on balance and depth. Use a limited color palette of bold hues for maximum impact.

About this movement

Background on Constructivism is available at its Wikipedia entry. The images above are not offered as an account of Constructivism as art historians understand it. They record what a commercial image model produced when asked for the style by name.

About this series

This entry is part of a survey, described in the series introduction. The full set of 60 movements is browsable in the Art Styles index. The survey used text-to-image generation, in which composition varies alongside the style itself.

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Associate Professor of Sociology at Queens College, CUNY. Writes about household finance, culture, and the tools social scientists use to measure economic life.