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Artist displays AI-generated print in National Museum Cardiff gallery

'Empty Plate' was on display for several hours before it was removed

ai artwork cardiff museum

Artist Elias Marrow displayed an AI-generated print on the walls of the National Museum Cardiff in Wales before it was removed by staff.

The artwork, titled Empty Plate (2024), depicts a young boy wearing school uniform and holding a plate. It was generated using AI before being printed.


Via Marrow's website, "Some say the work references Victorian charity propaganda. Others believe it’s a replica of a painting that never existed.

"Elias Marrow has made no comment."

The work was on display in the National Museum Cardiff's contemporary art wing for several hours and was viewed by a "few hundred people", Marrow said (via the BBC).

He told the publication he was interested in "how public institutions decide what's worth showing, and what happens when something outside that system appears within it".

"AI is here to stay", says artist

Using AI to create the artwork was "part of the natural evolution of artistic tools", Marrow said.

"AI is here to stay, to gatekeep its capability would be against the beliefs I hold dear about art," he added.

An Amgueddfa Cymru spokesperson said: "An item was placed without permission on a gallery wall in National Museum Cardiff.

"We were alerted to this and have removed the item in question."

Elias Marrow

On Instagram, Marrow shared an image of the artwork on the gallery wall. He wrote: "Empty Plate in place. Unnoticed in its weight and scope. This is not art, it's a symbol of the power of the moment."

The artist told the BBC: "The work isn't about disruption. It's about participation without permission.

"I'm not asking permission, but I'm not causing harm either."

Images courtesy of Elias Marrow