by Cara Ramer, Student Public Relations Writer
As artificial intelligence floods the creative world with machine-made images, ĢĒŠÄ¹ŁĶųās āPainters and Paintingsā art exhibit invites viewers to rediscover the human hand ā and heart ā behind every brushstroke.
Student Paintings Tell the Story Behind the Image
Open through January 14, 2026, in the universityās 220 Gallery, āPainters and Paintingsā features physical and digital paintings created by Cedarville art students. The exhibit encourages viewers to wrestle with the role of manmade art in a society flooded with AI-generated images ā to find the painter behind the painting. Each work of art is accompanied by a photo of the student artist as well as each studentās reflection on painting in the modern world.
Faculty Spark Dialogue on AI and Art
The idea for the exhibit came from Aaron Gosser, associate professor of studio art, after noticing Cedarvilleās use of AI-generated imagery in polished, public-facing graphics. As Gosser wrestled with the use of machine-generated art in places where handmade work had traditionally been used, he felt compelled to bring that conversation to campus.
Experience Art Beyond the Digital Screen
For the university community, the exhibit offers a chance to encounter physical, embodied works of art with a human touch rather than just images on a screen, where all visuals can appear equally valid.
āEach painting in the exhibit was made by a real person. Thereās someone behind each project whoās been grappling with how to move pigment around a flat surface ā and that process means something to them,ā said Gosser. āTheir very fingerprints are in it. Until you get to stand in front of a work of art, image is just image; it doesnāt matter to most people where itās coming from.ā
Exploring Creativity in the Age of AI
While AI may raise concerns for some artists, Gosser noted that technology has regularly shaped painting throughout history ā from the invention of the camera to innovation of tubed paint.
āAI represents a continuation of change in the art world. Weāre already so shaped by technology that we donāt even perceive it,ā said Gosser. āAI isnāt necessarily new territory. Itās going to change things, but painting itself doesnāt go away.ā
Gosser believes that launching a painting exhibit during a watershed moment of technological change creates a valuable opportunity for campus dialogue on the intersection of human creativity and artificial intelligence. āArt must be of its time, and for us, thatās artificial intelligence,ā said Gosser. āItās vital that our art interrogates it, questions it, and even critiques it.ā
But for Gosser, the most significant works of art are those with the story of the painter behind them ā their struggles and successes on the way to crafting something meaningful.
āEven the works of art I hang around my house have stories behind them,ā said Gosser. āThatās the thing that we, as viewers, connect with.ā Itās this human story, not the finished image, that Gosser believes can reshape how viewers think about creativity in an AI-driven world.
About ĢĒŠÄ¹ŁĶų
ĢĒŠÄ¹ŁĶų, an evangelical Christian institution in southwest Ohio, offers undergraduate and graduate residential and online programs across arts, sciences and professional fields. With 7,265 students, it is among Ohio's largest private universities and is ranked among the nationās top five evangelical universities in the Wall Street Journalās 2026 Best Colleges in the U.S. Cedarville is also known for its vibrant Christian community, challenging academics and high graduation and retention rates. Learn more at cedarville.edu.