@dullia.ai
I work like a xenologue, stepping beyond what is familiar to conjure new life forms and expressions. I’m drawn to metamorphosis, merging organic shapes with futuristic influences and nurturing a deep urge to see beyond everyday limits.
FRMWRK.AI Community is AI Art Collective | Global Hub for Creativity started by @9cons.ai and @tuda.ai with admin help from @dullia.ai
Scroll down to find our more about dullia.ai in her own words.

















When I was a child, my father gave me a telescope, and that moment of looking beyond what we know sparked my fascination and the wanderings of my imagination. Later, exploring applied arts and design opened up new forms of self-expression. Art is about telling your own story, no matter the medium, and AI art has provided me with a new way to bring all these experiences together, allowing me to share more than I could have imagined.
I live far from my family and friends, and I arrived here right before Covid. It was this brush with solitude after always being surrounded by people that sparked my need to create faces and characters, as though I were inventing a new circle around me.
My friends, especially those in crafts and design, are a huge source of inspiration. Their stories, along with everything I encounter, whether online or in the real world, fuel my ideas. In a fast-paced world, I believe curiosity and truly observing things are essential. And yes, I dig around a lot, haha. Snoop around, guys!
I’m drawn to surrealistic and biomorphic movements, with strong sci-fi and futuristic influences, and a touch of haute couture. I lean toward soft, pastel tones to reflect the gentleness I try to carry daily. I work like a xenologue, stepping beyond what is familiar to conjure new life forms and expressions. I’m drawn to metamorphosis, merging organic shapes with futuristic influences and nurturing a deep urge to see beyond everyday limits. My pieces echo human craftsmanship viewed through a different lens, inviting us to expand our sense of what’s possible while staying anchored in our shared humanity. Color is a powerful language—it evokes memories, guides the eye, and sets the mood with a single stroke.
AI art is a tool, a new way to express the human impulse to create. Like writing requires language and cinema depends on photography, AI art wouldn’t exist without the art and design it draws from. It’s a new movement still defining itself. What I’d love to see in AI art is a model that not only trains on visuals but also incorporates personal experiences. Imagine the self-expression that would be possible then?
I see my art as part of a larger creative ecosystem that connects design, craftsmanship, and imaginative exploration. While I focus on my own work, I believe it can spark dialogue across fields like fashion and art. We’re all contributing to something bigger, and I hope to expand those boundaries through collaboration.
Creating AI art makes me feel happy, inspired, frustrated, amused, amazed, stuck, and curious. Ultimately, it makes me feel alive. My favorite artists and designers? My friends: Sasha Calonne, a ceramist who shapes emotions into her pieces; Evan Boullonnois, a graphic designer and photographer whom I secretly envy; Corentin Corneau, whom I admire from afar. I also love the works of Niki de Saint Phalle, Antonio Gaudi, Josh Aikin, Junichiro Tanizaki, Syd Mead, Mario Tsai, and Vassily Kandinsky.
As for FRMWRK, I wasn’t part of the original group, but @9cons.ai invited me to join and now I have the honor of joining the admins to help the collective grow. It’s incredible to build a supportive ecosystem. AI art has a global reach, crossing borders and drawing from diverse influences. When we invite artists into the group, we look for curiosity and a willingness to experiment. Diversity, open-mindedness, and pushing boundaries are key. A good sense of humor doesn’t hurt either!
Instagram is great for visibility for the AI art community, but the algorithm can be tough on artists. I’d love to see AI art in a format that goes beyond screens – interactive setups, projections, installations, even augmented reality experiences. AI art will continue to evolve, moving beyond flat displays and into shared spaces where the boundaries between artist and audience, physical and digital worlds, can dissolve.
It’s not enough to ask whether AI art is ‘real art.’ There’s so much to explore regarding authorship, originality, and the relationship between human intention and algorithmic influence. AI art deserves thoughtful analysis – only then will we legitimize it as a true artistic medium.



