In a recent exhibition in Copenhagen, the visitors stepped into a dark room and an extraordinary host met him: a jaguar who saw the crowd, selected the selected people, and began sharing stories about his daughter, his rain forest and fire. AI -powered creatures, direct interactions with the hook, are designed for every visitor based on visual gestures. Bolivian Australian artist Vilata Ala developed the piece during the arts residence in the mail, one of the world’s leading AI research centers.
These residences are usually hosted by tech labs, museums, or educational centers, providing artists access to tools, computations, and peers to support creative experiences with AI. “My goal was to create a robot that can represent something more than a human being,” says Ayla. Ala’s jaguar is a clever use of early AI, but it is also a symbol of a wide movement: a rapidly growing crop of artists’ housing, which directly puts AI tools in the hands of creators, while creating how this technology is decided by the audience, lawmakers and courts.
In recent years, residences like these have been expanded rapidly, with new programs in Europe, North America and Asia, like the Max Planck Institute and Citi Institute programs. Many technicians describe them as a form of soft power. The pieces of artists who have participated in AI art residences have been presented in New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Galleries like Center Pompedeo in Paris.
Hook at the display at the fair. Photo courtesy Velteta Ala.
The latest program was launched by the French American cultural organization Villa Albertine. In early 2025, the organization created a dedicated AI track, which increased four new residents annually among 60 artists, thinkers and creators annually. The move was announced at an AI summit in Paris with French Minister Culture Rachida Dadi and was supported by Openi’s applications CEO Fadji Simo.
“We are not making so much choice to open a place for inquiry,” says Mohammad Bubudullah, director of Villa Albertine. “Some residents can criticize the AI or find the dangers.” According to Bobdullah, in 2024, Villa Albertin hosted a summit called the Arts in the Age of the Edge, which developed more than 500 participants and participants from both the US and French copyright offices.
Bubedullah says the programs are “designed to select the artist, not just his work.” They provide artists needed time and resources to find AI -use art projects. “Even if one uses AI on a large scale, he has to describe his intentions. It’s not just about output – it’s about the author.” As they say, “the tool should be behind a human.”
The purpose of such a cultural structure is to promote artistic production, but it can also affect how AI is viewed by the public, and AI often surpasses the negative impression around the art. “The use of AI developer AI is permissible to change the minds about what is permissible for the use of AI to use traditional artistic practice,” says Truston Gitste, a Cornell University ethics. “This can make it more acceptable.”
“The original value here is giving artists a place to suffer from it.”
Residents can support specific artists, but they do not overcome the wider concerns around AI art. “Changing contexts from random consumers, adding conflict models to formal residences,” says Gottz, “Gotzay says. “Work is still being done.”
These legal questions are not solved around the author and compensation. In the United States, stability AI, Madjurini, and others are examining the class action cases of artists against whether the use of trained generating models on copyright work.
The courts will decide these questions, but public sentiment can create limits: If A-Generated art is considered culturally derivative or exploited, it is difficult to defend its justification in policy or law, and vice versa.
Different forms of hook on the display in Copenhagen. Photo courtesy Velteta Ala.
A similar dynamic was played a century ago. In 1908, the US Supreme Court ruled that a new format for the piano rolls, then re -producing music, was not subject to copyright, because he was unable to read the human eye. The widespread reaction from musicians, publishers and the public encouraged Congress to pass the Copyright Act of 1909, which introduced a mandatory licensing system that requires payment of mechanical reproduction.
Gotz says, “These models have recognized aesthetic.” The more we have come to these visuals, the more ‘normal’ looks. “He speculates that it makes speculation, perhaps not only for AI art but also in other domains.
“There has always been a debate about inspiration compared to the sarcasm,” says Bobdullah. “
Alala’s view that “the problem is not that AI caps – humans copy permanently – that is, the benefits are not equally divided: big companies benefit the most.”
Despite these challenges, Ala looks at residents as the main experiments of experiments. She says, “We can’t just criticize that AI was built by the privileged men, we have to actively replace it.” “It’s not about the fact that I want to be AI: it is already what it is. We are transferring as a species to how we belong, remember and create a partner.”


