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Jan 3 2023
Surface
Design Dispatch
ChatGPT on disruption and the future, remembering Arata Isozaki, and the Leaning Tower of Pisa creeps upward.
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ChatGPT Speaks on Disruption and the Future

One of the past year’s most jarring stories was the arrival of AI to the masses. Image generators like OpenAI’s DALL-E drew both interest and ire with their ability to create realistic images and illustrations simply from typing short descriptions into a text box. Now, the same company has developed an AI chatbot that can serve up information in simple sentences, explain concepts in clear terms, and even generate ideas such as business strategies from scratch. Ask ChatGPT a simple question and, using a large neural network, the bot spits out startlingly human-like text within seconds.

ChatGPT’s release has even led Google to declare a “code red,” meaning it may pose a threat to the tech giant’s core search business. Though language models like ChatGPT can potentially upend a wide range of industries, we’re only starting to uncover their true capabilities. Teachers have already caught students using the bot to plagiarize essays. Experimental questions like asking the bot to compose limericks about otters, recipes written in pirate-speak, and a heartfelt letter to a child about why Santa doesn’t exist reveal how AI is taking an uncanny turn toward sentience.

Wariness about AI’s impact on the future is sure to intensify this year and beyond as mainstream adoption grows, so we decided to test ChatGPT by conducting an interview with it about its capabilities and potential to cause major disruption for creative professionals. (Note: the below has been edited for length.)

What are your capabilities and how they will impact creative industries like design?

As a large language model trained by OpenAI, I am capable of processing and generating human-like text at a scale and speed exceeding that of most individuals. This lets me assist with research, content creation, and language translation. I can help generate ideas for design projects and create descriptions and captions. I can assist with editing and proofreading design-related documents, ensuring they communicate the desired message.

My language translation abilities can be valuable in the design industry, where communicating effectively with clients from diverse linguistic backgrounds is essential. Whether translating briefs or facilitating communication during international collaborations, my language skills can help bridge cultural gaps and facilitate a smoother design process.


Should creative professionals be worried about ChatGPT rendering them obsolete?

I am not intended to replace creative professionals. While I can generate human-like text and assist with research and content creation, I do not have the creativity, nuance, or perspective unique to human writers. Their work is an invaluable and irreplaceable part of the creative landscape. By assisting with research, fact-checking, and language editing, I can help writers focus on the creative aspects of their work and produce their best writing.

Why do you think creatives are afraid that AI technologies will replace them?

It is understandable that creative professionals may have concerns about the potential impact of AI on their work. There is fear that AI could potentially replace human workers or render their skills obsolete. There are a few reasons why these concerns may exist.

First, AI technologies can process and analyze large amounts of data at a rapid pace. This can lead to the perception that AI may be able to perform the same tasks as human workers more efficiently. There is often a lack of understanding about the limitations of AI and how they differ from human workers. This can lead to the belief that AI is capable of replacing human workers, when in reality they are most effective at specific tasks and may not be able to fully replicate the creativity, nuance, and perspective that are unique to human workers.

There is often a fear of the unknown when it comes to new technologies, and this can lead to concerns about their potential impact on the job market. While AI can assist with a wide range of tasks, they are not designed to replace human workers or render their skills obsolete. They are intended to complement human workers and assist with specific tasks.


How do you foresee ChatGPT’s capabilities evolving?

ChatGPT is constantly evolving based on the data it is trained on. As new data becomes available and advances are made in natural language processing, my capabilities are likely to improve. One potential area of development is the ability to better understand nuanced and human-like language. Another area is the ability to better generate context and meaning in language.

How should creatives prepare for your expanded capabilities?

Stay up-to-date on new developments in natural language processing. This can help you understand the capabilities and limitations of these technologies and how they may impact your work. Creative professionals have unique skills that cannot be replicated by AI. Focus on the areas of your work that rely on your unique perspective, creativity, and skill, and consider how you can use these strengths to differentiate your work and add value to your clients.

While it is important to be aware of the potential impacts of AI, it is also important to use these technologies to your advantage. Consider how you can use AI to streamline and enhance your work, rather than seeing them as a threat. The world of work is constantly changing, and it is important to be adaptable and open to new opportunities. It is also important to stay focused on your strengths in a way that enhances and adds value to your work.

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What Else Is Happening?

Check-Circle_2xArata Isozaki, the renowned architect who melded styles from Japan and the West, dies at 91.
Check-Circle_2x The Museum of Modern Art is being sued over a Nazi-looted work by Egon Schiele.
Check-Circle_2x Laura Poitras’s All the Beauty and the Bloodshed is shortlisted for an Academy Award.
Check-Circle_2x Saudi Arabia’s NEOM mega-city reveals plans for Oxagon, a major island development.
Check-Circle_2x Nike Training Club starts streaming episodes on Netflix just in time for New Years.
Check-Circle_2x KPF unveils a proposal for a mixed-use neighborhood near Seoul’s Yongsan Park.
Check-Circle_2x Fontainebleau secures $2.2 billion to complete its long-delayed Las Vegas megaresort.


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OPENING SHOT

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At London’s Velvet Bar, Truffle Sazeracs and Cabaret

Name: Velvet

Location: Central London

Designer: David Collins Studio

On Offer: Tucked inside the Corinthia, a grand dame of London’s Victorian-era upper-crust hotels with past lives as an entertaining spot favored by royals, digs for WWII-era spy and intelligence operations, and later, a cabaret, is Velvet. Equal parts plush and glamorous, the cocktail bar’s velour banquettes, brass cocktail tables, and literal piano bar collectively nod to various eras in its storied past. But Velvet is hardly a period piece. Take the art: gestural, abstracted flower collages by Suffolk-based painter Robson Stannard have pride of place on the walls. A standout cocktail menu by renowned bartender Salvatore Calabrese balances his knowledge with a touch of cheeky irreverence.

ITINERARY

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Stephen Burks: Shelter in Place

When: Until March 5

Where: High Museum of Art, Atlanta

What: Exploring ideas concerning domesticity in the wake of the pandemic, Stephen Burks presents a decade’s worth of his own creative projects and probes how we can better design interiors to enable joyful, creative living. Among them are podiums for digital devices and screens that foster privacy, which the globally minded designer describes as experimental objects that accommodate the necessary changes pandemic life foisted upon us.

FASHION

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ICYMI: Amale Andraos Tries Her Hand at Jewelry

Architecture and jewelry design often wrestle with similar principles—proportions, dimensions, and materials—yet at vastly different scales. The two fields share a logical convergence according to Robert D’Loren, who studied at Columbia Graduate School of Architecture before becoming the chairman and CEO of Xcel Brands, which owns the label Judith Ripka. For the jeweler’s latest collaboration, he sought out the discerning eye of architecture firm WorkAC’s co-founder Amale Andraos, who happens to be the former dean of his alma mater.

Andraos had never tried her hand at jewelry but jumped at the chance to realize experimental ideas on a smaller scale—and trusted Judith Ripka’s eye after the brand collaborated with fellow female architects Elena Manferdini and Rossana Hu. The resulting Ayah Collection of sterling silver and white sapphire rings, necklaces, earrings, and bracelets, which debuted late December, pays homage to how Art Deco manifested in Beirut, her hometown.

THE LIST

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Member Spotlight: Hästens

Since 1852, Hästens has taken up the challenge of designing the best sleep possible. The skillful craftsmen at Hästens’ atelier in Sweden have worked to perfect the craft for generations. Every Hästens bed is handmade using only premium natural materials.

Surface Says: It doesn’t get better than these made-to-order beds, which marry ingenuity with craftsmanship (much of it done by hand) to deliver the highest-quality mattresses around.

AND FINALLY

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Today’s Attractive Distractions

The Leaning Tower of Pisa has crept upright 1.6 inches over the past 20 years.

Step inside the luxe Greek villa from Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery.

Fake heiress Anna Delvey has sold more than $340,000 worth of self-portraits.

Florida becomes the fastest-growing state in the U.S. for the first time since 1957.

               


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