Each month, Poets Northwest meets in NW Houston to share poems and tips on writing poetry. Next month weโll be focusing on revision, as well. This month, we were challenged to write an ekphrastic poem about a local artist or work of art displayed locally. It was there that I learned from friend and fellow member, Lynn G., about the Pearl Fincher Museum of Fine Arts โ located about 15 minutes from me. I must live under a rock. Iโve been to the courthouse and Iโve been to the Barbara Bush Library, both of which are walking distance from the Pearl.
I called Lynn on Thursday to tell her I was going there to โdo my homework.โ I was already four blocks from my house when I asked her, โWanna come?โ
To my surprised delight, she said โWhy not?โ and pulled into the parking lot about 10 seconds after I got there.
โAn artist date!โ I think we both mentally pulled out our old copies of The Artistโs Way, by Julia Cameron.
Below, youโll find my โhomework,โ an ekphrastic poem based on a work of art by Caroline Z. Marcos entitled, โOcean Biome.โ Several works of art inspired me, but this one tempted me to explore the images more deeply.
Nick Thacker, whom I met at last yearโs Oklahoma Writers Federation Inc. (OWFI) Annual Conference, presented a session called โWrite 80,000 Words in a Day.โ Iโll admit that while I am not one of the rabid AI haters, I rolled my eyes at him and whispered, as he tried to convince me to stay, that the only way to produce that much output was with AI. I have too much professional pride to let AI write for me. And any AI images I use? I donโt ask friends to do free labor for me and I wonโt pay for blog header images. I donโt trust โfound on internetโ freebies. And my own photos donโt always โgoโ with what Iโm writing. But for anything involving a profit, like illustrations for a childrenโs book? You bet Iโd pay a real artist.
That was probably a bad example, as I have yet to make a real profit from my childrenโs books, but you know what I mean โ I hope.
โAI, but not what you think,โ Nick said. โStick around. You may be pleasantly surprised.โ I did, and I was. He wasnโt suggesting the use of generative AI to write those 80,000 words after all. And (not) being from Missouri, but being somewhat skeptical, I tested his suggestions out right there during his session. He uses dictation โ something Iโm still too self-conscious to do โ to draft the novel, then uses AI, acting as a proofreader/copy-editor to clean up grammar, spelling, and punctuation. Itโs brilliant. And yes, you still have to read it and fix a few errors โ itโs far from perfect and still quite human-centered.
One of my favorite ways to use AI as a tool is to analyze, list strengths and weaknesses in my writing, and offer suggestions. I have never seen it suggest its own words, and wouldnโt use them if it did. AI writes doggerel, at best. It can recite the rules of formal verse, but rarely manages to follow them. It can invent new forms โ which is a fun new pastime of mine โ but you have to be careful and check its work to ensure that it hasnโt just renamed an existing form.
As a critic, though, it is competent. I use it, occasionally, to ensure that my metaphors and similes arenโt too much of a leap โ figuring that if AI gets the message Iโm trying to convey, a human reader should have no trouble understanding it. I use it to make sure that symbolism is neither too obscure nor too obvious and clichรฉ, to catch little speed-bumps and unintended repetition. It does a pretty decent job. And it offers constructive criticism without nastiness or sugar-coating, often treading where humans fear to tread in a misguided belief that heaping nothing but unconditional praise on a writerโs head is helpful. Sometimes, that praise is an understandable fear, like traversing a minefield. Seeย Delicate Sensibilities. For real poets, itโs more likeโฆ | by Holly Jahangiri | Medium
As with human critique, itโs important to know what rings true and what makes no sense in the context of the writerโs vision. Hereโs an example of where I used AI through three revisions of the following ekphrastic poem: ChatGPT Poem Analysis, Strengths & Weaknesses.
I think that ChatGPT is a little limited in its ability to โseeโ the artwork in question, though some image generators are able to analyze and describe an image. So the comments about the flowers and the โcomet-fishโ are not on point; I clarified the fish with its โtail on fireโ but ignored ChatGPTโs suggestions about the flowers. Still, it was all just food for thought, and I agree with Cat Farts (my nickname for ChatGPT) that the last version is the strongest of the three, and I appreciate the feedback.


I use AI for editing and sometimes for more ideas. Haven’t tried it for images yet, except a few times through Canva.
I loved Midjourney for a while, but now I’m back to fighting it for the images I want. It seems determined to lean more towards realistic images (which are not realistic at all, but neither are they are artistic as they used to be). Anyway, I do like it and I do think each generator has a recognizable style all its own, no matter what “influences” you tell it to use.
I use ChatGTP for editing sometimes and for brainstorming headlines occasionally, and it’s surprisingly not all drivel. I’m pleasantly surprised at its output sometimes!
Yesterday, I had it write this: https://chatgpt.com/share/67eeab88-637c-8007-a399-7b92ec8bf7c6
Too funny. I’m glad it can access search and public pages (mostly). I do not think it would dare plagiarize my work (even if it has trained on it) – it knows me too well, now. LOL