
An unsolicited digital print hung undetected for several hours on the walls of the National Museum Cardiff in Wales after it was installed by a conceptual artist in the museumâs contemporary art wing. Later revealed to be AI-generated, Elias Marrowâs âEmpty Plateâ (2024) bamboozled museum visitors and staff alike, as no one could explain its presence.
The print emulates an oil portrait of a nondescript young boy in a school uniform, holding a bare plate on his lap with a dour expression. Per the artistâs website, âIt is unclear whether [the boy] waits to be fed, punished, or simply forgotten.â While the subject appears to have the correct number of fingers, other aspects of the painting, including the jumbled alphabet on his uniform logo and the overall yellowish tinge to the work, are undeniable evidence of generative AI â though Marrowâs accompanying wall text does not mention it.
In an email to Hyperallergic, Marrow, whose email signature identifies him as âConceptual Artist. Cultural Surgeon,â said he conceived the premise last year when he made some sketches related to rising hunger and poverty in the United Kingdom and Wales, noting that theyâre âsubjects close to my heart.â A 2024 report titled Empty Plates and Cold Homes found that from a pool of over 2,000 participants in the United Kingdom, a quarter said that they have struggled to put food on the table for their children at some point in the last year.

With regards to incorporating AI, the artist explained to the BBC that he believes it is âhere to stay,â and that âgatekeep[ing] its capability would be against the beliefs I hold dear about art.â
The BBC reported that hundreds of visitors saw the work until a museum employee who was asked about it struggled to provide an answer. This is only a recent installment in Marrowâs continued interventions in museum galleries involving unauthorized artwork additions that probe âhow value is created, perceived, and sold,â with earlier iterations including a spray-painted shoe mounted on a cylinder at the Tate in London, and a wall text of an artwork that may or may not have been presented at the Bristol Museum.
The museum did not immediately respond to Hyperallergicâs inquiry, but told multiple media outlets that the work was taken down after it was flagged. Marrow confirmed that he hasnât been contacted by the museum and doesnât anticipate getting the work back.
While âEmpty Plateâ has been gifted to the National Museum Cardiff per Marrowâs statement, he told the institution that he plans to donate one of the original sketches behind the work to a South Wales food bank, saying, âIt may not hold much value, but it feels like the right resting place.â
Hopefully, heâll give this recipient a heads-up about his gift, though unannounced food donations might be more appreciated in the grand scheme of things.
âÂ