Over 20 lots will be up for bid from February 20th through March 5th and will include works from the likes of Refik Anado and Harold Cohen. The spread of mediums— sculptures, prints, light boxes, you name it— will range in price points, estimated up to $250,000.
However, swaths of anger and disappointment amongst artists have been stirred up following the controversial announcement. A letter, with over 3,000 signatures, was written in protest of the auction, calling on Christie’s to cancel it altogether.
This letter claims that the tools used to train the AI systems took artworks from actual artists as a model for the augmented pieces, without acquiring licensing or permissions first. Thus, if Christie’s doesn’t back out of this auction, artists feel as though it will only further promote “AI companies’ mass theft of human artists’ work,” as stated in their writing.