Photography is losing its heart. When everyone becomes an “AI Curator,” who is left to be the witness?
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the future of photography and where we’re heading as AI continues to advance, and it has brought me to a somewhat grim realization about the future of this beautiful craft. For over a century, photography was the language of witnessing. It was a physical, nervous-system response to a moment. But today, that language feels at risk of being replaced by a heavy digital dialect of AI synthesis and prompts. We are moving from the era of the Mechanic to the era of the Consumer, and we’re being told it’s "progress", that we’ve somehow won. I think at some point we’ll enter a world of so called "AI-powered idiot cameras" - machines designed to remove every bit of friction from the process through AI. Some people celebrate this, saying it "democratizes" art. But friction is what builds the muscle. We are probably heading toward a world where the camera handles the exposure, the focus, and even the 'vibe' through an AI prompt from the camera's menu. I’m not just thinking about AI as a separate tool you sit and prompt, but about it becoming an integrated part of the camera itself, shaping decisions in real time as you shoot.
In that future, people aren’t creators anymore, they are just managers of an algorithm built into the next generation of AI-driven cameras, embedded as an AI feature directly in the camera’s menu. Suddenly, everyone will feel like a "photographer" because they can take a mediocre shot and tell the Nikon AI, Sony AI or any other camera's AI: "Make this look professional". They aren’t learning how to see light, they’re learning how to prompt a simulation. We are facing a paradox where, because of AI, 90% of people might start believing they are “Five-Star Chefs.” But they aren’t in the kitchen, they’re just pressing buttons on a high-end microwave. When “amazing” becomes the baseline that anyone can achieve in seconds, even at home, “amazing” becomes boring. When everyone can produce a “masterpiece” without effort, the title of Photographer is stripped of its authority. If the world is about to be flooded with “perfect” images, we won’t be creating a culture of artists anymore, but rather a desert of meaning where nothing stands out because nothing was earned, just a kind of "perfect chaos".
We’re likely heading toward a future of AI-generated poses, lighting, backgrounds swapped on the fly, and “perfect” facial expressions that never actually happened, features that could become part of the next generation of AI-driven cameras in their menus. A future where the person doesn’t even have to be there in the moment, where entire scenes can be constructed after the fact, and where a single frame can be endlessly re-lit, re-angled, and re-composed without ever returning to reality. Where eyes can be adjusted, emotions fine-tuned, and “the perfect shot” is no longer captured, but assembled. If you didn’t physically choose the aperture to control the blur, or fight the shadows to save the highlights, you didn’t author the shot, you just curated a possibility. When a machine can generate a thousand "perfect" options instantly, choosing one doesn’t feel like authorship anymore. It feels like browsing. “Intentionality” is becoming a luxury tax that clients won’t want to pay anymore. Why hire a “Master of the Craft” who takes all day to find the perfect light when you can hire a regular person as an “AI Curator” who generates a “statistically perfect” result in ten minutes for a fraction of the cost? The “Master” isn’t becoming more distinct, they are becoming unemployed. Most photography today lives in the middle: portraits, events, products. If that layer gets replaced by AI, where do future professionals even come from?
What also worries me is not just the tools, but the audience. If people grow up looking at AI-perfect images every day, will they even be able to recognize real craftsmanship anymore? Or will anything imperfect just look like a mistake or noise? Also, there’s a difference between capturing a moment and generating something that looks like one. One is a trace of reality. The other is a probability.
But where does this end? Are we watching photography become a “dead language,” a niche skill spoken only by a tiny minority of purists, while the rest of the world settles for the simulation? When the “mass layer” of images is entirely synthetic and engagement-optimized, does the human witness even matter anymore, or are we just museum curators guarding a flame the world has forgotten how to see? I’m not saying I’m right, or that progress is “evil.” I’m just a mechanic wondering if we’re losing the engine in exchange for a smoother ride because that’s how it feels to me right now. Curious how others see this.
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