FurqanBil
THE MONET DILEMMA
In May 2026, a single social media post exposed something the art world wasn't ready to admit.
A user shared what they claimed was an AI-generated image in the style of Monet - and the crowd came. Critics. Enthusiasts. Self-appointed experts. They delivered their verdicts with confidence: emotionless, dull, borked, inferior. Paragraphs of technical analysis. Circles drawn on the flaws.
Then came the reveal. It was a real Monet.
A hundred years old. Hanging in museums. The Monet Dilemma isn't about one viral moment - it's about what that moment uncovered.
The way a label shapes perception before a single brushstroke is evaluated. The economy built on the promise of expertise, and what happens when that promise fractures in public.
The delete button as confession. The grief underneath the embarrassment. And the pattern that has played out, without exception, every single time humans have encountered something new enough to threaten the order they built their identity around.
This is about AI art. This is about gatekeeping. This is about the story we tell ourselves before we look at anything - and how quietly it controls everything we claim to see.
The gate is already a relic. The future is already here.
And somewhere, someone is deleting the evidence they ever said otherwise.