Date
Publisher
arXiv
This study investigates the aesthetic experience and educational value of
collaborative artmaking with generative artificial intelligence (AI) among
young learners and art students. Based on a survey of 112 participants, we
examine how human creators renegotiate their roles, how conventional notions of
originality are challenged, how the creative process is transformed, and how
aesthetic judgment is formed in human--AI co-creation. Empirically,
participants generally view AI as a partner that stimulates ideation and
expands creative boundaries rather than a passive tool, while simultaneously
voicing concerns about stylistic homogenization and the erosion of traditional
authorship. Theoretically, we synthesize Dewey's aesthetics of experience,
Ihde's postphenomenology, and actor--network theory (ANT) into a single
analytical framework to unpack the dynamics between human creators and AI as a
non-human actant. Findings indicate (i) a fluid subjectivity in which creators
shift across multiple stances (director, dialogic partner, discoverer); (ii) an
iterative, dialogic workflow (intent--generate--select--refine) that centers
critical interpretation; and (iii) an educational value shift from technical
skill training toward higher-order competencies such as critical judgment,
cross-modal ideation, and reflexivity. We argue that arts education should
cultivate a \emph{critical co-creation} stance toward technology, guiding
learners to collaborate with AI while preserving human distinctiveness in
concept formation, judgment, and meaning-making.
What is the application?
Who is the user?
Who age?
Why use AI?
Study design
