You’ll never look at your favorite video games the same way again.
Ever wonder what your favorite video games would look like through an AI-generated lens? Well, thanks to ai_curio_bot from Bearsharktopus Studios, there’s a Twitter bot more than capable of showing you the nightmare-inducing results.
All you have to do is tweet at ai_curio_bot with a specific prompt followed by whatever you would like to see horrifically recreated by the bot. For example, I sent it “botprompt: Link from The Legend of Zelda on an air mattress” because why not.
I doubted that ai_curio_bot could yield anything recognizable from this request, despite the heaps of evidence suggesting otherwise. Several hours later, a rather disturbing notification popped up in my mentions that you can check out below.
— ai_curio_bot (CURRENTLY ON P100, 4 MIN PER IMAGE) (@ai_curio_bot) October 4, 2021
There’s definitely an air mattress in the artwork, but I’m unsure how that twisting eldritch horror qualifies as Link. Is that his blue tunic off to the left? Maybe. I think his hairline is in the center, too. Either way, I wasn’t planning on sleeping tonight anyway — never using a Nintendo Switch again, for that matter.
Naturally, gamers are having a ball with ai_curio_bot. From Destiny’s Traveler to Hideo Kojima himself, the bot successfully makes me question if humanity officially has too much sway over the universe. Check out some of the, uh, more creative results for yourself below.
“I love finding avenues to flex my own creative muscles of what I’m doing outside of sports while still meshing it with sports.”
For The Win is introducing a new series featuring people whose work focuses on the more creative elements of sports. We spoke with several of the leading artists, authors and editors who are helping push sports to a more beautiful place.
NEW YORK – Eric Friedensohn didn’t even have time to get nervous. He was about to take the mound at Wrigley Field in July.
But it wasn’t going to be easy. He hadn’t thrown a baseball in a long time, and the mound feels like it’s twice as far away from home plate when you’re suddenly in front of a big crowd. It didn’t matter if he was ready. It was finally his time.
“I still don’t think I’ve fully processed it,” Friedensohn told For The Win. “I was elated. I was surprised. I had 15 minutes warning, so I was a little bit scared.”
The pitch wasn’t amazing. It landed outside the strike zone, and Clark, the official mascot of the Cubs who was waiting with a glove behind the plate, wasn’t able to catch it. For a ceremonial first pitch, though, it wasn’t as embarrassing as someone like 50 Cent or Dr. Fauci.
All things considered, it wasn’t a bad look for Friedensohn, especially since he makes his living as an abstract artist.
***
Friedensohn, also known as Efdot, is a visual artist and creative director based in Brooklyn who works with large-scale mural installations, fine art, screenprints and product collaborations. He has a few people employed on his team at his studio in Buschwick, which he said functions like a “mini creative agency” that he runs in tandem with his fine art practice.
He describes himself as very community-driven, and he has painted all types of murals, reaching as local as nearby small businesses and as expansive as co-working spaces around the world.
One example of his community-driven mindset includes his efforts to raise more than $60,000 for the charity Bring Change 2 Mind (BC2M) with the Cubs. Efdot was actually throwing the first pitch at Wrigley because the Cubs asked him to collaborate on a limited-edition collection for Mental Health Awareness Month. The project included a screen print and several pieces of apparel. He also appeared on Chicago outfielder Ian Happ’s podcast about mental health.
“Mixing my art with sports on that project was really interesting to me because it felt soft and tender,” explained Efdot.
When he caught up with For The Win, he was days into a project for the nonprofit New Heights NYC, which is a youth development program that aims to empower and educate underserved children. Part of its curriculum includes after-school basketball programs, and some of its notable alumni include NBA players, such as Precious Achiuwa, Moses Brown and Lance Thomas.
For this particular project, Efdot was installing a mural for New Heights NYC’s soon-to-open relocated home at the Bedford Union Armory in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn. The center will feature multiple brand-new basketball courts, and through his energetic style that sometimes resembles a city grid, his mural shared the story of the organization’s history.
The primary theme of this mural is ascension, with staircases a common motif. He included fun nods to NYC like a metro card, a big apple and other representations of the community and the New Heights organization itself.
“This is our new home so we really wanted to work with an artist that could come in and tell the story of where we’ve started and where we’ve come to,” Ashley Faison, the chief development officer for New Heights, told For The Win. “He has done a beautiful job marrying the concepts of books and basketball, and that stands out right away.”
This piece is one of many he has done with sports as a subject matter, which is an increasingly popular trend among some artists. Efdot is one of several contemporary artists who has become known for making art about sports.
Like many, sports were a big part of Friedensohn’s life when he was growing up. He played baseball and tennis and soccer. But the Brooklyn-based artist described his participation in athletics as a love-hate relationship. At a certain point, he said, he felt like he was playing more for his parents than he was for himself.
He began to realize that when he was finding more joy in art — he was inspired by his grandmother, who made stained glass as a material — and skateboarding. Eventually, he stopped playing altogether.
“But I always loved the art of sports,” said Efdot, who said he appreciated the rich history of design, typography and color on ephemera such as uniforms, patches, pins, hats and scoreboards. “I loved the nostalgia of seeing Brooklyn Dodgers in script. It still gives me a really warm feeling when I [see] those logos.”
Even though he was no longer playing, he still held fond memories from his childhood, like when he collected baseball cards with his brother. The two of them would sell items in their collection at school during recess.
***
Everything came full circle for Efdot when this past year, he was selected as one of the 20 artists featured to team up with baseball card trading company Topps for its Project 2020. He felt really lucky, of course, but he knew it wasn’t going to be an easy task. He typically didn’t draw faces and hadn’t paid as much attention to baseball as he did when he was younger.
“I was pretty nervous about it,” he admitted. “But it brought me back. It forced me to go back to my childhood memories. That was such a healthy thing for me to do during the early parts of the pandemic. It was a little bit of an escape with nostalgia.”
At first, because he didn’t want to redraw the players and represent them wrong, he mostly drew around their silhouettes to create an abstract environment or background while leaving their photographs intact.
Since then, Efdot pitched his own spin-off series that he sold through Topps in which he paid tribute to 10 iconic stadiums around the league. Those subjects didn’t have to use the human form, which gave him some more creative freedom than he had with the previous endeavor.
After completing that, he now is one of more than 50 artists currently participating in Topps’ Project 70. Unlike in Project 2020, where he was assigned cards to remix, he now has more creative flexibility to design any card from within 70 years of archival material in the Topps collections.
This time around, with the increased experience under his belt, he has leaned more into illustrations. He also changed the background of his images from black to white.
Meanwhile, with the booming markets of NFTs and the somewhat surprising popularity of remixed trading cards like his own, it’s as clear as ever that people love owning things. These days, he’s thinking about his submissions to Topps more in terms of how it relates to a series in the mind of a collector.
Within his creative process, that means doing as much research as possible on his subject so that he can add layers to the piece. He doesn’t have as much space to add as many details as he would in a mural, but he was able to pay tribute to the infamous Billy Ripken card with a swear word on it by sneaking in a reference on his card for Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Of course, Efdot acknowledged that there is only a small subset of people who like both sports and art, let alone his specific style of art.
But once those people found him, he was able to cultivate a collector base and reward them in unique ways. One idea he executed was to sell companion cards — featuring his own intellectual property with his original abstract figurative Blob character — that he printed himself in Queens.
The Blob character shows up again on his mural in Crown Heights, this time while wearing a basketball uniform sporting the No. 8 on the front. Like in much of his work, which is both playful and accessible, the figure evokes fluidity and motion in an otherwise static image.
“I could be myself, fully, but also express it through sports,” explained Efdot. “I love finding avenues to flex my own creative muscles of what I’m doing outside of sports while still meshing it with sports.”
He aims to take the essence of his subject and boil it down to one icon, almost like a logo in sports. Over time, he hopes that people begin to associate his creations with certain feelings in their own life.
As he continues to hone his style, in all of his practice, Efdot looks to create images simple enough so they can be easily digestible and recognizable while still remaining unique and full of personality.
For example, when he collaborated with Topps, his intentions were to move away from the uber- sleek digital photography of contemporary baseball cards and more toward the illustrated look that was found on the back of baseball cards in the 1950s.
One recent example of that was his card for Satchel Paige. Artistically, this is one of his most successful pieces to date because it captures the recognizable motion that is found within both Paige’s pitching windup (where his arm is whipping upon release) and marries that to the visual language of Efdot’s iconic, wavy style.
“It’s almost a wink in each design,” explained Efdot. “For me, finding that balance has been fun.”
Of course, working with Topps has also attracted a new group of sports fans to his art. For some, his style hasn’t resonated, and he said he had to build up a thicker skin to the criticism.
However, he said the overwhelming majority are supportive and understand what he is doing and understand the vision. People have questions about the art, and they want to know what is happening next. In fact, he’s even seen some folks who bought his baseball cards go on to buy one of his original pieces, like a line drawing of the city or of one of his characters in nature.
“The passion from the audience is bigger than anything I’ve ever experienced before,” said Efdot. “One of my favorite things is seeing these baseball card collectors become art collectors.”
Followers of the whale-watching company in Moss Landing, Calif., immediately recognized the dropping as being similar in appearance to the peculiar-looking Mola mola.
“Cut the material off and sell it on eBay for 1M,” reads one of dozens of comments.
Another echoed the sentiment: “Put some resin on it and make it into jewelry.”
Mola mola, which roam the oceans slurping sea jellies and other small prey, can measure 10 feet and weigh up 5,000 pounds. They’re the world’s heaviest bony fish and among the most easily recognizable fish species.
Cummings told For The Win Outdoors that she noticed the shape of the gull’s dropping as she was removing the flybridge cover from one of her boats.
“It was immediate,” she said. “I’d be embarrassed about turning this into news if it wasn’t so uncanny.”
Because the fish are so goofy looking and docile, sightings are cherished by boaters as they search for whales and other marine mammals.
Reads another comment on Cummings’ Facebook page: “I want a bird to do this to me!”
Carling Jackson is known as The Athlete Artist, but her work goes well beyond sports art. Jackson is currently working on a painting based on a never-before-seen photograph of Kobe Bryant as a child playing basketball in Europe. She plans to gift the painting to Vanessa Bryant once it’s finished.
Carling Jackson is known as The Athlete Artist, but her work goes well beyond sports art. Jackson is currently working on a painting based on a never-before-seen photograph of Kobe Bryant as a child playing basketball in Europe. She plans to gift the painting to Vanessa Bryant once it’s finished.
Former Notre Dame star defensive end and 2020 NFL Draft prospect Khalid Kareem gives a look into just how long he’s been dreaming of making it to the NFL. In third grade in 2006, he wrote a book for school in which he said being Super Bowl 60 MVP was his dream. Now, he sees that dream as being within reach.
Former Notre Dame star defensive end and 2020 NFL Draft prospect Khalid Kareem gives a look into just how long he’s been dreaming of making it to the NFL. In third grade in 2006, he wrote a book for school in which he said being Super Bowl 60 MVP was his dream. Now, he sees that dream as being within reach.
Former Notre Dame defensive end and 2020 NFL Draft prospect Khalid Kareem explains what happened to his shoulder during his final season with the Fighting Irish and how his recovery is going. He’s been dreaming of the NFL since he was a young boy, as he shares the details of here, and soon his dreams will become a reality.
Former Notre Dame defensive end and 2020 NFL Draft prospect Khalid Kareem explains what happened to his shoulder during his final season with the Fighting Irish and how his recovery is going. He’s been dreaming of the NFL since he was a young boy, as he shares the details of here, and soon his dreams will become a reality.
Meet James, Mohammed, German and Arial. They’re part of Wings, a youth mentoring program that Jordan Brand supports. As part of the Jordan Chicago Collaborators’ Collection during #NBAAllStar weekend, they created a hoodie, long-sleeve T-shirt and special-edition Air Jordan X.
Meet James, Mohammed, German and Arial. They’re part of Wings, a youth mentoring program that Jordan Brand supports. As part of the Jordan Chicago Collaborators’ Collection during #NBAAllStar weekend, they created a hoodie, long-sleeve T-shirt and special-edition Air Jordan X.
As part of the Jordan Brand pop-up venue for #NBAAllStar weekend in Chicago, local artists were given a color based on the CTA’s train lines to express the meaning of “unite” from a personal and city perspective.
As part of the Jordan Brand pop-up venue for #NBAAllStar weekend in Chicago, local artists were given a color based on the CTA’s train lines to express the meaning of “unite” from a personal and city perspective.
A fan said the selfie should be hung in the Albright-Knox Gallery, and the gallery was all too happy to comply.
In a sentence that future generations will look back on with bewilderment: A screenshot of a quote tweet of a selfie of Bills quarterback Josh Allen has been hung in a Buffalo art gallery.
The stunt came about when a Bills fan posted the selfie Allen took with fans on Twitter, telling the world that the photo should be hung up in the Albright-Knox Gallery. The Albright-Knox Gallery did just that, posting a tweet of the photo hanging up with a hastily printed out caption.
It’s a bit, of course — the Albright-Knox gallery posted a photo of the art hanging on its museum walls, but the gallery is actually closed until 2022, while it undergoes construction.
Next we’ll get Allen to the gallery, taking a selfie with the photo, and on and on it will go until we have the perfect piece of postmodern Buffalo football art. We can’t wait.