Forget the myths of talent. In addition to timeless lessons from Berger, Manari, and Hegarty, make visual decision making that cuts through the noise, using a sharp signal-versus-noise filter for the AI ​​age.
Picture this: You’re scrolling at 2 a.m., thousands of images tearing past — hyperreal portraits, dreamy landscapes, flawless AI compositions. Most felt… well. polished forgetful Then someone stops you. Your breath is ragged. You cannot scroll. You zoom in felt This
This reaction is not magic. It’s a trained eye at work.
As a product designer, fine artist, and now AI art director who has spent years looking at images and now annotating thousands of images with Grok, Midjourney, and Firefly, I’ve realized something powerful: technical skill gets you in the door, but better intuition is what separates “cool prompts” from work. Liveswhich motivates people, which stands out even when every feed is saturated.
The best part? Anyone can train this eye. It’s not about being born with it. It’s about deliberate practice – learning to notice what is most missed. In this guide, we’ll steal the wisdom of John Berger. Ways to see And About the searchby Bruno Manari Design as artand John Hegartys Hegarty on creativity: There are no rules.. We’ll include Nasim Nicholas Taleb’s thoughts on signal vs. noise to navigate today’s AI explosion.
No submission suggestions. There are no museum tours for the show. Just practical, everyday ways to sharpen your vision so you can produce (and spot) excellence—even when a machine can produce a million variations in seconds. Let’s train that eye together.