Close Menu
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
What's Hot

Dealers at Artissima await ‘potentially transformative’ changes to art tax in Italy

June 8, 2025

For 50 years, these painters in Chelsea have found comradery in what can be a lonely art

June 8, 2025

Art student’s murals showcase Liverpool’s ‘rich heritage’

June 8, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
Rate My ArtRate My Art
Home»Artist»‘We must revolt against the soulless rise of AI’
Artist

‘We must revolt against the soulless rise of AI’

By MilyeApril 27, 20256 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.

 Dave McKean, comic book artist, a man in a dark shirt sits in front of an artist's drawing desk in low light.

Credit: Dave McKean

Like many, the first time I discovered Dave McKean’s art was Arkham Asylum, the abstract, painterly, mixed media of this Batman graphic novel impressed upon a younger me how comic art can be more than spandex superheroes and clean lines.

I’d grown up on Dan Dare and 2000AD rather than Marvel, but even exposed to the art of Ian Gibson, Carlos Ezquerra and Simon Bisley couldn’t really compare to the surreal, textural chaos of Dave McKean‘s art. He’s the kind of artist whose work you feel as much as you see.

Dave McKean will be joining other legendary comic artists and illustrators at this year’s COMCON NAPOLI 2025, being held in the beautifully lively Italian city of Naples from 1 to 4 May – this ancient city is itself a cauldron of busyness that never sleeps, it feels like the perfect setting for Dave McKean.

Dave McKean interview; a man in a dark shirt sits in front of an artist's drawing table

Credit: Dave McKean

Developing an art style

Ahead of COMCON NAPOLI 2025 I get to interview Dave McKean, and to discover what still drives and influences him, revealing how his ideas collide in unexpected ways.

“I’ve tried to keep moving,” Dave says, when asked about the evolution of his style, that mixes traditional art paints, photography, Photoshop techniques and more. “I get bored easily, and I enjoy finding a visual tone of voice that feels appropriate for each story […] even for different scenes, moods, emotions within each narrative.”

(For an insight, read our tutorial for how to create a painterly style using Photoshop.)

That hunger for variety has become a signature trait – his art is instantly recognisable, yet never predictable. “As I’ve got older, I’m clearer about what is important to me in a story,” Dave adds. “Why I should spend a year or two on something, how it should be communicated.”

It’s not just time that’s shaped Dave’s trajectory and art, it’s the collaborations, too. I fully expect the artist to namecheck his comic writers but the stage has been a big influence.

“Working in theatre with Wildworks and Bill Mitchell changed the way I develop ideas completely,” he says. “Working with actors taught me a lot about how people move in a space, and how that communicates their inner lives.” That theatrical sensibility, the improvised, character-driven, deeply atmospheric feel for space permeates the artist’s later work.

Dave McKean art and interview; the cover of a Batman comic

Arkham Asylum was a standout graphic novel, and featured mixed media art from Dave McKean. | Credit: DC Comics

Influencing Dave McKean

Now, Dave’s projects are as diverse and ambitious as ever. He’s currently deep in a collaboration with writer Robert Macfarlane and musician Johnny Flynn, weaving the myth of Gilgamesh into a story about the people who uncovered and translated it.

“We’re overlaying our own narratives and interpretations over the facts and geography of it all,” he tells me. In another project, Dave is playing visual ping-pong with Spanish artist Jorge Gonzalez, no plot, no rules, just pure visual instinct. And then there’s the book of paintings inspired by silent cinema, a project he’s been nursing for fifteen years.

“I’m still uncovering films to explore and digging into the reason why those flickery old images got under my skin,” he says. “They feel so much more mysterious and affecting to me than contemporary images.”

Dave McKean art and interview; joker painting from Arkham Asylum

The interior art for Batman Arkham Asylum is as beautifully complex and detailed as the covers. | Credit: DC Comics

The tussle with technology

Dave has always been a visual alchemist, mixing drawing, photography, collage and digital trickery together, it’s why Arkham Asylum jumped from the shelf all those years ago, but he approaches digital tools with a certain hesitance.

“All art materials were, at one time, new technology,” he says. “But digital imagery can very quickly lose its personal touch […] the sense of the mind and hand behind the image.” That human quality, messy, imperfect, emotionally resonant as it is, is central to everything Dave values in art.

Which is perhaps why he bristles at the idea of AI-generated art.

“It’s astounding how fast machine learning has come upon us,” he says. “But we mustn’t forget that AI is not intelligent. It doesn’t understand anything. It just spits out an infinite amount of meaningless glossy baubles.”

For Dave, and other artists I’ve interviewed, like Stanley Lau, the creative act is human at its core. “AI has no business in our creative lives,” Dave says, with conviction. “This will affect everyone. We all test ourselves and grow up by using our human desire to be creative […] If all we need to do is watch passively as machines do all this for us, our minds will rot.”

Dave McKean art and interview; art for an Adobe calendar from 2000

Art for an Adobe calendar from 2000. | Credit: Dave McKean

Telling human stories

That’s not just a warning, it’s a call to arms for emerging artists. “I no longer ask students how they’ve done something,” he tells me. “I’m only interested in why they’ve done it. I think more than ever, we need to assert the essential nature of art, that is, empathy, the chance to see through another human’s eyes, to understand how we think and feel and the differences and similarities in the lives we lead.”

He adds: “Anything that encourages the telling of personal stories, I’m in favour of, and that may be the only way to revolt against the soulless machines and their billionaire autocratic owners.”

For an artist who has spent a career exploring new ways to tell stories in art, I ask Dave how he sees visual storytelling changing or adapting to the emergence of AI.

“Tech is all well and good, and can make for interesting and surprising new forms,” he begins. “I think interactive media has barely been explored because we are obsessed with forcing it to be linear, when it’s obviously not – it’s exploratory. So the architecture may change, but the essential humanity in the centre of all this change will still need to connect with those stories and explorations, to understand, and feel something, hopefully something positive and life affirming.”

Dave McKean interview; a painting of abstract people

Visit the COMCON NAPOLI 2025 website for the latest news. Want to brush up your skills? Read our Procreate tutorials for advice and pick up the best digital art software to get started.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleBruce Logan, Hollywood VFX Artist, Dies at Age 78
Next Article Cyndi Lauper Joins the Short List of Grammy Best New Artist Winners in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

Related Posts

Artist

US-based dissident artist critical of China’s President Xi allegedly targeted by British businessman accused of being a Chinese spy

June 8, 2025
Artist

The brilliant artist whose paintings will be enjoyed more than ever before.

June 7, 2025
Artist

Mrs. GREEN APPLE Tops Three Billboard Japan 2025 Mid-Year Charts

June 7, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Dealers at Artissima await ‘potentially transformative’ changes to art tax in Italy

June 8, 2025

Masha Art | Architectural Digest India

August 26, 2024

How can I avoid art investment scams?

August 26, 2024
Monthly Featured
Art Investors

The Art and Science of Investor Targeting

MilyeMay 28, 2025
Art Rate

How Trump’s tariffs could affect the UK and your money

MilyeApril 10, 2025
Fine Art

October in the Wonsook Kim College of Fine Arts – News

MilyeOctober 22, 2024
Most Popular

Work by renowned Scottish pop artist Michael Forbes to go on display in Inverness

August 28, 2024

Work by Palestinian artist to open NIKA Project Space’s Paris gallery

August 28, 2024

Woordfees: Printmaking exhibition explores human rights in democratic SA

October 12, 2024
Our Picks

Artist Spotlight: Holly Macve – Our Culture

October 9, 2024

Why Are Art Investors Suddenly Ravenous for Dinosaurs? A Q&A With Nicolai Frahm, a Collector With Scientists on Speed Dial

October 15, 2024

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, announces Landmark $25 Million Gift

October 14, 2024
Weekly Featured

Bruce Logan, Hollywood VFX Artist, Dies at Age 78

April 27, 2025

Fine Art & Antiques | The Irish Times

October 19, 2024

Soaring high in his journey through art

May 27, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
  • Get In Touch
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2025 Rate My Art

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.