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Real Monet painting labeled as AI fools thousands of online critics

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  • SHL0MS posted a cropped Claude Monet Water Lilies painting on X with a fake “Made with AI” label, inviting users to critique its flaws.petapixel
  • Commenters called the 150-year-old masterpiece “soulless” and lacking depth; some wrote lengthy analyses before quietly deleting their replies after the reveal.petapixel
  • The experiment highlights research showing people devalue art when told AI made it, fueling debate over anti-AI bias in online communities.petapixel

Prankster Posts Real Monet Painting Labeled as AI Art, Fools Thousands of Critics

An anonymous conceptual artist turned social media into an unwitting psychology lab this week, posting an authentic Claude Monet painting on X with a fake “Made with AI” label — and watching as users lined up to tear it apart as soulless, poorly composed slop.

The experiment, carried out by the pseudonymous digital artist known as SHL0MS, began on May 12 when the account posted a cropped image from Monet’s famed Water Lilies series — a collection of roughly 250 oil paintings the French Impressionist created over the final three decades of his life — along with a caption inviting users to explain “what makes this inferior to a real Monet painting.”petapixel

Critics Took the Bait

The responses were swift and confident. “There is no cohesion to the depth and color choices,” wrote one user. “The reflection of the tree bleeds into the lilypads with no regard for spatial depth or contrast.” Another declared: “Monet actually understood how light behaves on water.” One commenter dismissed the work as having “no soul,” while another called it outright “crap” and demanded that “AI needs to go.”petapixel

An especially committed critic penned an 850-word analysis of the supposed AI artwork’s failings. Others drew diagrams of “eye lines” to illustrate what they described as incoherent composition. As the post went viral and the reveal spread, many began quietly deleting their replies — but not before SHL0MS and other users captured screenshots.petapixel

A Lesson in Cognitive Bias

The stunt echoes findings from peer-reviewed research. A 2024 study published in Nature found that participants generally preferred AI-generated artworks over human-made ones when they did not know the origin — but preferred AI art less once informed a machine had created it. An earlier 2004 study on the “effort heuristic” similarly showed that people value art more when they believe it required greater human labor.petapixel

The experiment has reignited a broader debate about what some commentators have called an “anti-AI witch hunt” in online art communities. Artists who work digitally have reported being falsely accused of using generative AI, with some scaling back experimental techniques to avoid suspicion. One digital artist wrote in March 2026 that their decades-old sketches — predating tools like Midjourney and DALL-E — had been flagged as AI-generated.plasticallyperfect

The Artist Behind the Prank

SHL0MS, a self-described “NFT performance artist,” has a history of provocative conceptual projects, including selling an NFT of a blank image and destroying a Lamborghini to auction the fragments. The Monet experiment fits squarely within that tradition: using the internet’s reflexive impulses to expose something about how people form judgments.substack

As one X user summarized the episode: “A live demonstration of how a single label changes what people see.”x

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