The article explores the concept of “fakeness” in visual representation, tracing a path from ancient pictorial illusions to AI-generated deepfakes. Through a reflection on falsehood as a structural element of collective perception, it examines how visual deception has shifted in function—from artistic wonder to a sophisticated tool of disinformation and manipulation. The use of AI in image production not only alters our perception of reality but actively contributes to constructing a synthetic and unstable collective memory, where there is a risk of remembering events that never occurred. Within this context, the article investigates the potential of drawing as a critical and intentional act—one that resists the immediacy of artificial images and restores a necessary distance between reality and representation. The conclusion does not call for a nostalgic defense of truth, nor a wholesale rejection of illusion, but rather for its recognition and understanding. It reaffirms the value of drawing as a space for reflection, responsibility, and resistance, where truth and falsehood are no longer fixed categories, but tools for awareness and critical thought.

The Perfect Illusion and the Recollection of Non-Events / L’illusione perfetta e il ricordo del mai accaduto / Nucifora, Sebastiano. - In: IMG JOURNAL. - ISSN 2724-2463. - 13:(In corso di stampa).

The Perfect Illusion and the Recollection of Non-Events / L’illusione perfetta e il ricordo del mai accaduto

Nucifora Sebastiano
In corso di stampa

Abstract

The article explores the concept of “fakeness” in visual representation, tracing a path from ancient pictorial illusions to AI-generated deepfakes. Through a reflection on falsehood as a structural element of collective perception, it examines how visual deception has shifted in function—from artistic wonder to a sophisticated tool of disinformation and manipulation. The use of AI in image production not only alters our perception of reality but actively contributes to constructing a synthetic and unstable collective memory, where there is a risk of remembering events that never occurred. Within this context, the article investigates the potential of drawing as a critical and intentional act—one that resists the immediacy of artificial images and restores a necessary distance between reality and representation. The conclusion does not call for a nostalgic defense of truth, nor a wholesale rejection of illusion, but rather for its recognition and understanding. It reaffirms the value of drawing as a space for reflection, responsibility, and resistance, where truth and falsehood are no longer fixed categories, but tools for awareness and critical thought.
In corso di stampa
Artificial Intelligence, Deepfake, Collective Memory, Drawing, Visual Representation
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12318/160226
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