The New Production Frontier

Theme
The first wave of AI video was all about the thrill of the prompt – type a line, press enter, and out comes a moving image. Professional creative work, however, typically does not rely on the element of surprise as a core strategy. It relies on mapping out the intended outcome and working backwards to ensure that production can deliver on the creative vision.
The more interesting shift now taking place in AI is within production workflows, where ideas become shots, sequences, edits, approvals, and eventually, finished work. Creative teams need more than a beautiful first frame. They need characters that stay consistent across shots, scenes that hold together, tools that can move from storyboard to edit, and systems that make iteration feel less like starting over every time. This is where AI video starts to become truly useful.
Signal
That was the current running through The New Production Frontier, our Main Stage conversation featuring Tian Pei from LTX, Academy Award winner and Co-Founder of Magnopus Alex Henning, and BAFTA winner Habib Zargarpour, on how AI is changing professional creative production from film to advertising to brand storytelling. The conversation around AI video is growing up. The question has moved from “can it generate something wild?” towards “can it help us make the thing we actually meant to make?”
LTX sits directly amidst that shift, with a creative platform built to support the full arc of video production, from scripting and storyboarding through editing and final delivery. The bigger story is around how creative compression brings more of the production stack closer to the person shaping the idea. That dials up the importance of taste, direction, and process. Said another way, the best creative work still depends on a point of view, and AI now gives that point of view more room to move.
Summit
You’re the First to Know
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Cannes Lions: We’re hosting something intimate and special on the Tuesday of Cannes Lions. Hit reply or message Dani if you will be there and we’ll get you on the list ✨
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Crafted in Paris: Artist and the Machine is joining as a Supporting Partner of Benjamin Benichou’s invite-only event in Paris on the future of AI and craft, on the evening of June 19th. Artist and the Machine community will be prioritized if you request to join.
Pulse
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Artist and the Machine Featured in Forbes: Cortney Harding recapped highlights from the AI & Creativity Summit in New York, from Main Stage sessions, to workshops in the Human Lounge, and everything in between.
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The Filmmakers at Cannes Who Are Learning to Love AI: Featured in the Hollywood Reporter, a growing faction on the Croisette is making the case that technology should serve the artist rather than replace them.
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Social-native video is becoming a brand format: Vogue Business reported on the rise of micro-dramas as fashion brands experiment with short, narrative, video-first formats built for social distribution.
Our AI & Creativity Summit gathers the people shaping the future of creativity. After Hours extends that room into a virtual setting with more learning, practical exchange, and direct access to the field’s leading artists, technologists, executives, and builders.
If you’re creating something aligned with Artist and the Machine or you’d like to recommend work shaping this space, we’d love to see it for the chance to be featured. Reach out to us at community@artistandthemachine.com.
Til next time,
Artist and the Machine.
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Paige Piskin is an award-winning AI and XR creator, known for pushing the boundaries of digital makeup, character design, and augmented reality experiences. With AR effects generating more than 300 billion impressions, shared 2 billion times, Paige has worked with major brands like Netflix, Bratz, Warner, and Coldplay, bringing immersive storytelling to life. She has also been a guest judge for Netflix, consultant, and 2x hackathon winner, recognized for her innovative work in AI-driven AR experiences. Paige is passionate about blending generative AI with character design, expanding the possibilities of digital self-expression and interactive storytelling.
Claire Silver is an anonymous AI-Collaborative artist that works with oil, acrylic, collage, photography, and different digital mediums to create her work. She often blends the classical style and mythos into her art, collaboratively producing work that feels at once familiar and strange. Her work explores themes of innocence, trauma, the hero’s journey, and how our view of them will change in an increasingly transhumanist future. Claire’s art can be found in the permanent collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, has been at Sotheby’s London and Christie’s New York and in galleries, museums, and festivals all over the world. Featured in the New York Times, WIRED, Fortune, NPR, and countless podcasts, Claire takes every opportunity to explore her unending fascination with AI, fight for visibility for this budding art movement, and wonder at the magnitude of this moment in history. She often feels like a caveman painting fire. Claire is vocal in her belief that with the rise of AI, for the first time, the barrier of skill is swept away and that in this evolving era, taste is the new skill.