Time to introduce one of our co-founders and educator —Veronika Pell, known in the AI art world as Mindeye.
An art director and artist, Veronika creates work across various AI platforms, winning awards at international festivals and exhibitions. She’s a creative partner of OpenAI, Runway, and Hailou AI and collaborates with ad agencies in the U.S., Europe, Australia, and Mexico.
”AI has changed my life, and that’s no exaggeration. For me, it’s more than just a machine—it turns creativity into something alive, something magical.”
Veronika has spent her life in the arts—studying film directing at VGIK, working in photography, multimedia, contemporary art, and art direction at Paramount Comedy. Over time, these experiences merged into a unique expertise in creativity, production, technology, and teaching.
In our upcoming course, she’ll be sharing this knowledge—starting with her favorite AI model, Midjourney. The curriculum has been carefully developed, packed with hands-on assignments that her students love.
More details soon—stay tuned.
#aiworkflow #digitalcreativity #visualstorytelling #creativeai #futureofart #learnwithai
Why we teach AI art?
Because AI is a gateway to creativity.
Before AI, there was often a frustrating gap between taste and skill. Great ideas stayed unrealized simply because mastering traditional tools took years of practice. AI art changes this—it lowers the barrier, allowing anyone to create impressive results quickly, as long as they’re willing to learn and connect with the technology.
AI isn’t a magical button. It’s about engaging in an exciting dialogue with technology. It’s about freedom—the freedom to explore endless styles, techniques, and worlds. It empowers you to focus on your ideas, rather than getting lost in complex software.
#creativeschool #aiartcourse #midjourney #averycreativeschool
AI/CC Featured Artist — Veronika Pell (Mindeye)
Between darkness and becoming.
Between instinct and creation.
Veronika Pell (Mindeye) creates visual worlds that feel both deeply personal and universally symbolic—where transformation is constant, and identity is never fixed. Her work moves through tension: the human and the other, the seen and the hidden, the fragile and the powerful.
But her practice doesn’t end with creation.
Through A Very Creative School @averycreativeschool , Veronika extends her artistic philosophy into teaching, guiding others to explore AI not just as a tool, but as a space for self-discovery. Her approach is rooted in experimentation, intuition, and finding your own voice within a medium that can generate almost anything.
She encourages artists to move beyond the obvious, to question, to play, and to embrace the unknown, because that’s where something real begins to emerge.
In both her art and her teaching, there is a shared belief: creativity is not about perfection, but about transformation.
→ Discover her work and explore her journey:
/featured-artists/veronika-pell
#AICC #AICCCREATORS #AICCFeaturedArtist #AICCCreativeCommunity #FutureofArt
What is visibility for an artist? Like… everything? The biggest question is how to actually achieve it.
Artist, publisher, and curator Anna Dial will talk on how small press publishing can turn your ideas into tangible forms. From zines and handmade books to installations, she’ll share how to make your work visible, build community, and expand beyond the gallery system.
Join the Artist Talk for free on April, 30th at 7 p.m. (Berlin time, UTC+2). More info and registration link in bio.
Imagine you get a letter. Inside there’s a torn image and a note telling you to add something and send it to someone else. You don’t really know why. You do it anyway.
That’s what Ray Johnson was doing in the 1960s. Roy Ascott took that same idea further — in 1982 he connected artists across 11 cities via satellite to write a single fairytale together. Nobody owned it. The connection was the work.
Artists featured: Ray Johnson, Roy Ascott
Illustrations by @the_artifictional
This winter, our students jumped into a brand-new challenge called Dark Fairytale. Sweet stories went a little… wrong: magic got moody, heroes misbehaved, and happily-ever-afters took a dark turn. Turns out fairytales love the shadows too.