Ai and the future of creatives
Mar 11 2026 | By: Pink Chair Photography LLC
Are you scared yet? Before you start hyperventilating into that brown paper sack give me a second....
Let's talk about the Rembrandt Factor and why I believe you cannot be replaced by a prompt.
We’ve all seen the headlines. We’ve all scrolled through the latest "masterpieces" generated in seconds by a machine. It’s easy to look at the sheer volume of AI-generated imagery and feel a cold shiver. If a computer can mimic lighting, texture, and composition with a click, where does that leave us?
But I want you to stop for a second and think about Rembrandt.
Anyone with an internet connection can look at thousands of his paintings. We can study his use of chiaroscuro, the way he handled skin tones, or the haunting depth of his portraits. But if someone walked up to you today and offered you the chance to actually sit for Rembrandt?
You wouldn't say, "No thanks, I’ll just download a Jpeg."
You would sit down immediately. You’d probably hold your breath.
It’s Not About the Result
The reason you’d jump at that chance isn’t just to have a piece of canvas to hang on your wall. It’s because the value isn't actually the painting.
The value is being the person the artist chose to paint.
There is a fundamental, human magic in the exchange between a creator and their subject. When you're behind the lens—or the brush—you aren't just "producing content." You are witnessing someone. You are making a series of intentional, soulful choices that tell your subject, “I see you, and this is how you matter.”
The "Camera-First" Soul
In my own work, I’ve always aimed for that "Old Masters" feel. Even before the post-processing begins, there’s a specific quality that happens in the camera—a weight and a texture that feels more like a gallery than a hard drive. AI can mimic the look of a painting, but it can’t mimic the moment it was created.
AI is an Echo: It reflects what has already been done.
You are a Connection: You are creating an experience that exists nowhere else in time.
Why We Win
A machine can’t "choose" you. It doesn’t have a perspective; it has an algorithm. It can’t make a client feel seen, or nervous, or eventually, beautiful. It can't navigate the nuances of a session at Golden hour Tuesday when the light hits the location just right and you and your subject finally click.
So, to my fellow photographers and creatives: don’t fear the tech. It can generate pixels, but it can’t generate the prestige of being the one in the chair.
If you trap your work in all its entirety within the finality of the pixels you create then you are selling yourself and your process short and robbing your client of the experience of being made into art.
Keep creating work that feels like a legacy. Keep seeing people. Because as long as humans want to be "chosen" by an artist’s eye, your seat behind the lens is safe.