Judging Visual Representations of AI: Dialogue, Difference, and Diversity

The title "judging visual representations of AI" is at the top of the image. Circle shaped frames of headshots of each of the images are below. The left features a decorative image of a woman working simultaneously as a delivery worker, remote employee, and caring her child, representing the opportunities and risks of work digitalization.

Recently, the ESRC Centre for Digital Futures at Work (Digit) and Better Images of AI ran a competition aimed at reimagining visual representations of digital transformations at work, including those driven by AI implementation. We received over 70 submissions to the competition from artists and creators from all around the world who created images that reflected the key themes from Digit’s research: digital adoption; digital inclusion; changing employment contracts and conditions; and digital dialogues. 

When designing the competition, it was identified that the judging panel would need to reflect a range of disciplinary and experiential perspectives to meaningfully assess the strength of the submissions which engaged with the social, political, legal, and emotional dimensions of digital transformation of work. In several cases, this required judges to draw upon their own positionality and experiences as knowledgeable individuals in their field, but also as the very people who are situated within the systems and dynamics that the artworks sought to represent or critique. The judges included an international panel of artists, data scientists, sociologists, lawyers, business experts, trade unionists and policy advisors working on the cutting edge of AI. 

In this blog post, we reflect on some of the choices that we made when we designed the ‘Digital Dialogues Art Competition’. We spotlight the panel of judges that came together to deliberate and score the entries into the competition. This blog post serves as a reminder of the importance of thoughtful and interdisciplinary judging panels, especially when the work being evaluated is as interpretive and subjective as visual imagery. We also highlight how projects like this can create space for new forms of conversation between disciplines, such as technology, marketing, and creative fields. 


Who judges and why it matters

In any competition, judging is inevitably shaped by individual and disciplinary values. In recognition of this, we placed considerable emphasis on curating a judging panel that included a broad range of expertise and experience. The Digit team reached out to their existing multidisciplinary community fostered during the undertaking of the research to  include artists, researchers and practitioners who are working at the intersections of technology, work, and society. The idea was to invite individuals who had different relationships to digital transformation at work, so that no single narrative or perspective would determine the judging. 

To guide the process, we also developed a scoring framework that the judges used independently to score the images. The criteria were evenly weighted across four elements: visual impact, alignment with the brief, originality and creativity, and communication of the research themes. Scores were collated from the judges and presented during the deliberation session, allowing everyone to discuss the correlations shown in the rankings of the images that were scored in advance. 

It was interesting to see how the conversations between the judges also raised deeper questions that reflect the epistemic tensions between different kinds of knowledge and disciplines. A salient example of this emerged in the panel’s conversation around one submission, “Wheel of Progress” which is shown below. The judges wrangled with the question: does the abstraction of an image obscure communication, or does it open space for interpretation and imagination about the image’s theme? 

Two workers running inside a scroll wheel embedded in a computer mouse, controlled by a giant capitalist hand.

Image credit: ‘Wheel of Progress’ by Leo Lau*

Jacqueline O’Reilly (Co-Director of Digit) reflected on the importance of having a range of images, some that might be more literal and some that require deeper interpretation to appeal to all audiences. Michael Luck (Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sussex) welcomed the ambiguity of the image, noting: “I like having to think and to look and to try and work out what’s going on in this”. Another judge, Nick Scott (Head of the Centre for Responsible Union AI) offered a nuanced view, appreciating the layered nature of the piece: “Yes, it is abstract. Yes, it is a bit more artistic. But actually, once you see it – and ‘get it’ – it is telling a very clear story”. 

“Wheel of Progress” demonstrates the nuances of judging visual arts. Better Images of AI is focussed on reimagining images which often requires us to step outside familiar stereotypes, engage with complexity, and explore the different ways that the impacts of AI can be seen, felt, and understood. 


Our judging panel and their reflections

The judging panel was composed of scholars, practitioners, artists, and individuals whose knowledge spanned art, AI, law, labour, and marketing. For many of the judges, the experience of participating in the competition was beneficial and offered a space to engage with research through visual means.

Several of the judges’ conversations during the panel also showed how the judging process prompted them to reflect on their own assumptions: asking whose experiences of digital transformation are prioritised and how visuals can challenge or reinforce dominant narratives. For artists on the panel, the dialogue with scholars and practitioners also offered a chance to see how their own creative methodologies could be expanded or recontextualised to reveal or reframe dimensions of research that are often overlooked. 

Below, we include short bios of each judge, alongside selected reflections on the value they found in the competition and the reasoning behind their decision to engage with the Digital Dialogues Art Competition.

Chanell Daniels

Chanell is the Responsible Technology Innovation Manager at Digital Catapult and Visiting Policy Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford. She was previously a Senior Manager in Community Safety at Depop and currently sits as an AI Advisory Board Member for OpenUK.

“With these images, there is an interesting ability to capture nuanced considerations and problems with AI use that can be very difficult to translate into text. This could be applied with how companies and their employees or other stakeholders are able to communicate the impact of digital transformation changes and the concerns that may arise.” 

Nick Scott

Nick brings over 20 years as a digital leader spanning non-profit, trade union and research organisations. At Unions 21 he heads up the Centre for Responsible Union AI, which has been set up to help unions navigate the impact AI and emerging technologies have on their staff, operations, members and mission.

“The union movement is rightly very focused on supporting workers through the impact of AI, from job changes to developments like algorithmic management. We’re looking at the other side – what are the challenges, but also the opportunities, for unions as organisations from AI? How can we manage AI to build union strength when it is most needed?”

Niels Bonde

Niels is a digital artist and his PhD research at the University of Applied Arts Vienna is on facial recognition. Niels’ work has been shown in installations in museums and galleries such as Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, MIT List Visual Arts Center, Boston, ZKM Karlsruhe, PS1 MoMa New York, Malmö Kunstmuseum, Statens Museum for Kunst Copenhagen, Academy of Fine Arts Hanoi Vietnam, and Contemporary Art Centre Vilnius Lithuania.

“AI-generated images now have become much more convincing, and as a consequence of that we see a deluge of AI-slop where the content is generated by Chat GPT and friends’ harvesting of images coming from similar sources, generating similar content. This is in particular an issue in illustration, as this competition addresses. As a few prompts quickly generate enormous amounts of derivative images, it is important to support and promote original content made by artists.”

Bhumika Billa

Bhumika is a PhD student at Cambridge Faculty of Law, Trust scholar, and Research Associate at the Centre for Business Research, University of Cambridge. Bhumika is also an award-winning poet, dancer, and filmmaker – her work has been featured by various organisations including Button Poetry, BBC Words First, Southbank Centre, Apples & Snakes, UniSlam, and Harvard University.

“This was the first time I was exploring how we are translating AI through art because so far I’ve only thought about how AI has been translating us in my research. I think it’s really important to look at that reflexivity.” 

Jacqueline O’Reilly 

Jacqueline is the Co-Director for the ESRC Centre for Digital Futures at Work (Digit) and Professor of Comparative Human Resource Management at the University of Sussex Business School. Jacqueline was awarded a Jean Monnet Research Fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence and appointed Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS) in 2019.

“It has been a great experimental vehicle to communicate the academic evidence from our research to the broadest audience. We hope this will ignite further discussions about these emerging trends.”

Michael Luck

Michael is the Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Provost at the University of Sussex. Previously, he was founding Director of King’s Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Director of the UKRI Centre for Doctoral Training in Safe and Trusted AI.

“The tone of the conversation that we have in general in the press is just not good enough. I think that having appropriate representations and thinking about the implications of AI is critical for the future.”

Tania Duarte

Tania is the Founder of We and AI, a UK non-profit focusing on facilitating critical thinking and more inclusive decision making about AI through AI literacy. Their programmes include the Better Images of AI collaboration with BBC R&D and the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence.

“The competition entries as a whole were wonderful in terms of the diversity of medium, style, and conceptual approach. At a time when so much visual content online seems to be so uniformly stylised and bland, to see illustrations, collages, digital art, cartoons, watercolours tell such different stories in provocative and intriguing ways is refreshing. I particularly enjoyed the creation or depiction of some new metaphors of AI that are far closer to the bone than ones we typically see.”

Ben Wodecki

Ben is an accomplished technology journalist with an established track record reporting on cutting-edge developments in AI, emerging tech, data centres, networking, and innovation law. He was named among MVPR’s top 18 journalists writing about AI in 2024 and has previously written for AI Business, The AI Journal, and Capacity Media.

Rob Keery

Rob is the CMO at Anything is Possible and Jagged Edge AI. Rob loves connecting with bold brands and getting under the skin of their media, tech and creative challenges – then turning them into effective growth.

“Day to day it’s challenging to communicate about AI with people whose knowledge is mediated through tech-sector boosterism or media fearmongering. In the blink of an eye AI has gone from superstructure to infrastructure, creating an urgent need to develop more nuanced tools to help people understand the way AI tech is changing their lives and work.

“If AI is going to fundamentally restructure work and the economy, our home lives and our interactions with online spaces, and that ‘if’ is getting smaller every day, then people need to have a voice to exercise their control and autonomy over the pace and nature of that change. But that voice is impossible without language, and people do not have that language for understanding the role of AI in their lives – so creating new models to think with is a project that deserves our sustained attention and input.”

Maninder Paul

Maninder is LinkedIn’s Top Digital Strategy Voice 2024, a seasoned B2B marketing strategist with 15+ years of experience in digital marketing and AI-driven transformation for global tech brands like Accenture and Adobe.

“As a senior marketer, I know the power of visuals in shaping brand perception and storytelling – especially in B2B. Images don’t just support a message; they are the message. I was honoured to serve as a judge for Better Images in AI – an initiative that encourages us to critically examine how AI is influencing culture.

AI can now produce images at scale, but speed and scale don’t always translate to quality or relevance. Too often, we see outputs that reflect embedded biases – falling into stereotypes, missing details, and offering a one-sided view.Whether it’s gender, race, age, or profession, these visual shortcuts can unintentionally reinforce exclusion. We’re at a pivotal moment. If we’re intentional, we can tap into AI to create visual narratives that truly reflect the diversity of the world we’re speaking to.”


By bringing people together from diverse disciplines, it was acknowledged that each judge came with their own ways of seeing, interpreting, and engaging with visual works. Their reflections as judges, but also people who regularly communicate about and engage with AI, remind us about the role that visual communication plays in shaping public understandings of technological change.

The deliberations between the judges also show how visuals serve an important role to complicate narratives, invite reimagining, and open up seemingly complex ideas to wider audiences. We hope that the “Digital Dialogues Art Competition” inspires others to think creatively about how academic research can be visualised, and to see the act of judging as a meaningful opportunity to share knowledge and reflect on differences. 


*While the original “Wheel of Progress” submission sparked rich discussion among the judges for its abstract and interpretive qualities, a simpler, more accessible version of the image has since been added to the Better Images of AI library which you can see here. The library is designed to function as an alternative to traditional stock imagery by providing clear visuals for public communication about AI so a variation of this image was added and can be downloaded for free under a CCBY-4.0 license. 

Cover image attribution: Julieta Longo & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Winners Announced: Competition to Visualise ‘Digital Transformation at Work’

Poster announcing the winners of the Digital Dialogues Art Competition. White text reads 'Winners Announced' with maroon background. In the middle, there is a collage of some of the winning images. Includes logos of ESRC, Better Images of AI and Digit.

In April, the ESRC Centre for Digital Futures at Work (Digit) and Better Images of AI (BIoAI) launched a competition to reimagine the visual communication of how work is changing in the digital age. 

We received over 70 images to the competition from illustrators, artists, researchers, graphic designers, and photographers from all around the world, including Brazil, Hong Kong, Lebanon, France, Uganda, Argentina, Peru, Ireland, the US and the UK. The submissions thoughtfully challenged the dominant stock imagery used to depict digital transformation at work by offering more nuanced, inclusive, and grounded visual representations. 

Entrants submitted their images to reflect four themes: digital adoption, digital inclusion, changing employment contracts and working conditions, and digital dialogues. These were derived from the ‘Digital Dialogues’ report of Digit’s 5 year research programme which investigated ongoing impacts of digital transformation on people’s daily lives. 

“Collectively, these images prompt us to think more deeply about the multifaceted impacts of the digital transformation of work. They offer us more thoughtful, nuanced and varied ways of seeing and imagining the changes already taking place. By making them freely available through the Better Images of AI library, we hope they will also play a small part in helping to shape the emergent digital work ecosystem, by helping to shape the wider conversation. It has been a great experimental vehicle to communicate the academic evidence from our research to the broadest audience. We hope this will ignite further discussions about these emerging trends”
Professor Jacqueline O’Reilly, Co-Director of Digit

The BIoAI team conducted an initial short list of images for judges to score. The panel came together to discuss their scores and select a series of winners and runners-up that they thought best reflected the complexity, diversity, and real-world implications of digital transformation at work. The judging panel was composed of experts from creative, research, technical, and union backgrounds: 

  • Niels Bonde (digital artist and academic fellow)
  • Bhumika Billa (legal academic and creative) 
  • Chanell Daniels (Responsible AI manager at Digital Catapult) 
  • Tania Duarte (Better Images of AI, Founder of We and AI) 
  • Rob Keery (CMO at Anything is Possible and Jagged Edge AI) 
  • Michael Luck (Deputy Vice-Chancellor at University of Sussex) 
  • Jacqueline O’Reilly (Co-Director of Digit)
  • Maninder Paul (AI Strategist) 
  • Nick Scott (AI Director at Unions 21) 
  • Nina Wakeford (Professor of Art) 
  • Ben Wodeki (Technology Reporter) 

As a result of the strength and number of competition entries, the judges awarded an additional ‘highly commended’ prize.

We would like to thank all the artists who entered the competition, including many who kindly donated their submissions to the Better Images of AI library. This means that a wider selection of over 20 images are available under a Creative Commons license for anyone to use for free with attribution.

“We have been overwhelmed to receive such a diverse range of submissions that provided rich interpretations of Digit’s research and illustrate really interesting aspects of digital transformation, that don’t make it into stock image libraries. A special thank you to the judges, Digit, and ESRC who have also supported and contributed invaluably to the competition. We look forward to seeing these new images being used by the Better Images of AI’ Image library’s users to illustrate news articles and comment related not only to digital transformation and the future of work, but also some of the broader questions they raise about the increasing use of AI in the workplace.”
– Tania Duarte, Founder of We and AI, for Better images of AI

The winners

Yutong Liu & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“Across time, the sun never sets. Exploitation? Oppression? Or convenience? A group of people work around the tower, hailing from different places and time zones. While they enjoy greater freedom in choosing their working hours, they also face the challenges of time differences. This is the precarious balance of digital nomadism.”

Download “Digital Nomads: Across Time” for free in the Better Images of AI library.

WINNER #1: Kathryn Conrad – “Isolation” 

Kathryn Conrad & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“The image is intended to represent independent data gig workers who work in isolation not only from the larger project with which they might be engaged (e.g., flagging graphic images for video platforms, tagging data for commercial AI systems or weapon systems) but also from other human workers (through distance, physical separation, or technological buffers like headphones).”

Download “Isolation” for free in the Better Images of AI library. 

WINNER #2: Yutong Liu – “Digital Nomads: Digital-Based Connection” 

Yutong Liu & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“Thanks to advancements in digital technology, people can now work from various places, including those closer to nature, reflecting a shift in work environments. However, at the same time, birds resembling mouse cursors are causing chaos in the sky. Through this imagery, I highlight the challenges and unknown risks brought by such digital communities.”

Download “Digital Nomads: Digital-Based Connection” for free in the Better Images of AI library. 

WINNER #3: Janet Turra – “Entry Level” 

Janet Turra & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“I wanted to illustrate how digital transformation can make it more difficult for young people to gain the skills required for entry level jobs. The goalposts being moved, as it were, as a result of AI adoption.”

Download “Entry Level” for free in the Better Images of AI library. 

WINNER #4: IceMing – “Stochastic Parrots at Work” 

IceMing & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“The image illustrates the experimental integration of AI into human workplaces, drawing on the metaphor of “stochastic parrots” to represent generative AI tools. The glitchy AI parrots assist with analyzing, sorting, and sense-making tasks, but their presence is varied. Some AI are leashed, symbolizing attempts at control, while others respond to human commands more autonomously.”

Download “Stochastic Parrots at Work” for free in the Better Images of AI library.


The runners up

RUNNER UP #1: Leo Lau – ”Wheel of Progress”

‘Wheel of Progress’ by Leo Lau

“This image explores the paradox of digital transformation in the workplace. 1 or 2 knowledge workers, running inside a wheel embedded within a computer mouse, struggle to keep pace as a powerful hand (representing employers or capitalistic forces).”

RUNNER UP #2 (JOINT): Leo Lau – “Knowledge Sweatshop”

Leo Lau & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“This image illustrates digital transformation gone wrong, where technology becomes a tool for intensified extraction. Instead of liberating labour, automation can lock workers into more exhausting cycles of output, without increasing agency or rewards.”

Download “Knowledge Sweatshop” for free in the Better Images of AI library. 

RUNNER UP #2 (JOINT): Julieta Longo – ”Digitalisation and Moonlighting” 

Julieta Longo & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“The image represents both the possibilities and the risks of work digitalisation, particularly for mothers and people with caregiving responsibilities. Platform-based work and remote work are presented as activities that may help reconcile paid and unpaid labor, though this reconciliation often involves tensions.”

Download “Digitalisation and Moonlighting” for free in the Better Images of AI library.

RUNNER UP #3: Nadia Nadesan – ”We’re Sorry!” 

‘We’re Sorry’ by Nadia Nadesan

“It evokes a time when mobile devices were tools of aspiration and accessibility, yet now symbolize obsolescence. The depicted phone represents both an entry point to digital life and a marker of technological disparity—while some communities have moved on to advanced smart devices and constant connectivity, others remain tethered to outdated tools.”

RUNNER UP #4: Jamillah Knowles – ”Bold Office” 

Jamillah Knowles & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

“A brightly coloured office populated with all kinds of people working at connected desks. There are computer screens and networks in the air in clouds. The image shows the connectivity of a digitally transformed workplace.”

Download “Bold Office” for free in the Better Images of AI library.

HIGHLY COMMENDED: Reihaneh Golpayegani – ”Employment in Frames” 

‘Employment in Frames’ by Reihaneh Golpayegani

“This image was intended to convey multiple concepts, the storyboard style was chosen to draw attention to changed working conditions—while also touching on socio-economic inequalities and workplace technology adoption. The blurring of work and personal life is emphasised in two separate illustrations as one of the most relatable implications of digital transformation.”


In the coming weeks, we’ll be posting a series of deep dives into the artwork and artists that entered our ‘Digital Dialogues Art Competition’. These posts will explore the ideas behind the entries, the creative processes involved, and the broader themes about digital transformation that we’ve seen emerge across the submissions.

We’ll also be sharing feedback from the judges and organisers, offering insight into how decisions were made and how the competition itself was designed, reflecting on the criteria and the reasons specific choices were made.

Cover image credits (left to right)

IceMing & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Janet Turra & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Julieta Longo & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Leo Lau & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Yutong Liu & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Kathryn Conrad & Digit / https://betterimagesofai.org / https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Open Competition to Create More Realistic Stock Images of ‘Digital Transformation at Work’

ANNOUNCEMENT

The ESRC Digital Futures at Work Research Centre (Digit) and Better Images of AI (BIoAI) are delighted to announce a competition to reimagine the visual communication of how work is changing in the digital age. The Digit Centre has undertaken a significant five year research programme culminating in insights about real-world digital transformations currently impacting people’s daily lives.

ARTISTS BRIEF

To visually capture the digital transformation of work and digital dialogues around these changes. We  will offer eight prizes for new visual images across four  themes from the report:

  1. Digital Adoption
  2. Digital Inclusion
  3. Changing employment contracts and working conditions 
  4. Digital Dialogues

We invite the creative community to illustrate the realities of these themes. By reflecting on the research findings, artists can help visually communicate and build better understandings about how digital technologies are shaping changes in the workplace.

Digit is teaming up with the non-profit Better Images of AI (BIoAI) collaboration and free image library – to bring visuals created for the competition to the attention of a global audience of media, education and content creators.

BIoAI will make selected entries free to use on Creative Commons licences to better frame and illustrate the wider debates seen in public articles and content about the future of work in the digital age. 


UPDATE 18th May 2025: The deadline is being extended to allow entries to be submitted by 23:59 on 18th May 2025 in ANY time zone.

  • Competition Opens: Wednesday 9th April 2025
  • Competition Closes: Sunday 18th May 2025 (23:00 UTC)
  • Winners Notified: Friday 20th June 2025
  • Public Announcement: w/c 7th July 2025

Prizes

– Grand prize: £600
– Winner: 4 x £400 prizes
– Runner-up: 4 x £300 prizes

Please note that funds not received in GBP Sterling will be subject to reductions due to foreign exchange fees.

Eligibility

– Open to everyone over the age of 18 at the time of submission or interaction with the project
– Students, amateurs, and professionals from across all creative fields are welcomed
– Global entries from around the world are welcomed but will need to ensure that they can receive payment, and be responsible for legal and practical requirements related to receiving payments in their countries.
– Entries from collaborations or commercial organisations are eligible
– Prizes are for original artwork created for exclusive use of the competition. Submissions should be the artist’s own original work and should not infringe upon any third party’s intellectual property. If submissions include elements such as images, graphics and other materials created by others (e.g., in a collage or mixed-media work) the artist must have the appropriate rights or licenses to use them.
– Multiple entries are welcome

Formats

Static digital files of images created by (but not limited to) the following methods are encouraged:
– Digital art, 3D rendering
– Photography
– Collage, remixing
– Illustration
– High quality photographs of sculpture, craft, or 3D artworks
– Printmaking
– Painting, drawing

Please note that images created using AI image generators are subject to certain conditions which are detailed in the next section.

Use of AI and AI image generators

AI-generated artworks will only be eligible if:

-Original artwork by the submitting artist is used as the visual prompt and style 

-The image generator used to create the image:

  • Has only consented art used in its training 
  • Compensates artists with work in its training set
  • Marks all images as generated

(Currently Public Diffusion has been recommended but alternatives which meet these criteria can be discussed).

-The way the image generator has been used in the process is described within the image documentation provided.

-Processes which use AI but are not text-to-image AI image generators (such as found in digital editing platforms) are admissible. For example background remove, expand, filters.

Judging criteria

Entries will be scored based on meeting a combination of criteria including:
– Visual and aesthetic impact
– Meeting the brief and reflecting the research
– Originality and creativity
– Avoidance of unhelpful tropes
– Communicating the themes from the research findings

Judging panel

Entries will be shortlisted then judged by a panel of experts in different fields including creative, communications, technical or digital and work. Judges’ decisions will be final.

Use of images

-A condition of accepting a prize as a winning entry is that the image copyright will be transferred to University of Sussex.
-The image may also be made available in the Better Images of AI image library on a Creative Commons licence 4.0.  This allows for commercial adaptation and use, but requires every use to be credited to the artist and project.
-Images which do not win or accept prizes remain the property of the artist, but may be offered the opportunity to be included in the Better Images of AI library, and shared on the Digit website.

Inclusivity

-Entries are encouraged from individuals from all groups, communities and backgrounds. 
-Entrants are encouraged to contact the team if they have accessibility requirements and require information or submission in a different format.

Publicity

-Winning entries will be publicised and selected winners may have the option for potential further publicity.
-Entries that are unsuccessful, but are deemed to model and inspire in accordance with the aims of the competition may also be given the opportunity to be featured in publicity.

Prize Payment

-We aim to pay winners by 30 June 2025. They will need to submit an invoice or receipt to receive payment.
-Winners from outside the UK will be subject to foreign currency conversion fees of roughly 3%.
-We and AI LTD will administer all prize payments on behalf of the Digit Centre at the University of Sussex.

Data Sharing

Entrants will be asked for:
– Name and email for correspondence only
– (Optional) The entrant’s name and website (if applicable) may be published with your competition entry on social media, the Better Images of AI library, and other news forms.


  • Submission is by filling out this Form which will need to be received by Sunday 18th May 2025 (23:00 UTC).
  • If you log in to Google you can start and return to the form at any time, otherwise we suggest you have all information ready before you fill it in. In either case it will need to be submitted by the deadline.
  • If you have any accessibility requirements please contact info@betterimagesofai.org  so alternative arrangements can be made. 
  • You can submit as many entries as you like, as long as you provide all the relevant information for each of the images.
  • Files will need to be submitted as .PNG files size 2560×1440. As images can be very large, we ask for links to image files.
  • Alongside your image, you will also be asked to provide a short description and answer some brief questions relating to the development process, the transfer of intellectual property, and your background (optional).
  • You will be able to submit up to 5 images through the form, if you wish to enter more images please get in touch so we can help facilitate this with you. 
  • If you change your mind about entering, get in touch and we will remove your entry.

Please make sure you have read the following sections with details of the brief thoroughly before starting or submitting your entry.


The aim of the competition is to contribute to wider public understanding of the ways in which AI-enabled technologies are changing work. Creating images which will increase such understanding requires a thoughtful consideration of the landscape of digital transformation and AI at work, which is the focus of Digit’s research.

About Digit:

Digit stands for the Digital Futures At Work Research Centre, and was established in 2020 with investment from The UKRI Economic and Social Research Council (ERSC), a UK government funded research and innovation body. 

A number of researchers based at universities led by the University of Sussex Business School and Leeds University Business School, with the universities of Cambridge, Aberdeen, Manchester and Monash, and the Institute for the Future of Work have been examining  the way that digital technologies are reshaping work. They have been looking at the impact on employers, workers and their representatives, job seekers and governments. Their aim is to inform current debates about the future of work and develop a compelling, empirical basis for effective policy-making.

Digit is the organisation funding the competition and setting the brief. You can find out more about Digit here.

About Digital Dialogues:

One of the key outputs of Digit’s research is the ‘Digital Dialogues’ report, summarising findings from the Centre’s research on digital transformation at work. The findings identify the key challenges now facing governments, businesses, trade unions, civil society organisations, and workers – and how they are shaping the future of work.

These are the findings that the competition seeks to illustrate visually. You can find out more about the report here.

About Better Images of AI:

Better Images of AI is non-profit project and website which includes:

  • a free image library
  • articles about visual representations of AI
  • research and guidance on how to communicate about AI and technology in more realistic, transparent and inclusive ways.

BIoAI is an open and global collaboration between several individuals and non-profit organisations and institutes. They are united by a shared aim to enable better conversations and understanding of AI by replacing misleading but dominant science fiction imagery of AI with more useful (and less exclusionary and biased images). 

Some of the partners include BBC R&D, LCFI, Digital Catapult, Scottish AI Alliance, AI Sweden, Finnish Centre for Artificial Intelligence and others, as well as individual activists, artists and academics. Better Images of AI is coordinated and maintained by We and AI, a UK non-profit focused on critical AI literacy. 

The project has been highly influential with images used by hundreds of content producers communicating about AI including global news media and content creators, and viewed at least 2,000,000 times. 

Useful links:

Better Images of AI have written this creative brief based on their research and experience in this area. They are always keen to maintain longer term relationships with artists interested in this area.

Stock images are photography or other images which are licensed for use via various library sites. They are used for a number of different purposes such as to accompany news media or features articles, to accompany online communications such as newsletters or websites, to illustrate reports or research, to decorate events spaces, slide presentations and books. They are found based on keywords, and stock image libraries buy images and copyright from mainly professional commercial artists which they know will be commercially successful. Often this means signifying the keyword in question in a recognisable and popular way.

For complex and evolving subjects references to recognisable images can be influenced by historic or existing popular cultural media representations. Commercially successful images are often striking, compelling and provide a provocative visual shorthand to communicate the idea. However, too often, images of AI have become self-referential and endlessly copied and reworked cliches, without being connected to the lived realities of the topic. The resulting dominance of common aesthetics and iconography is oversimplistic and misinforms public perceptions and understanding of the topics.

Future of Work and digital transformation are areas in which most images found in stock image libraries are often not really reflective of the topics they are being used to illustrate. Images about AI often contain robots or brains, but instead could be much more meaningfully represented by the themes from Digit’s research, which looks at how people and organisations are using or being impacted by AI and other technologies at work. 

Stock images are used by journalists, writers, editors, content creators, thought leaders, artists, commentators, academics, educators, public, private, and third sector communications and marketing departments.

As such, creating new, fresher images of digital work (and resulting challenges) which are informed by the realities which the research explores will:

  • Help society at large to increase understanding of the way work is changing
  • Facilitate more meaningful and informed discussions about how we respond
  • Encourage users and viewers to think critically about the challenges uncovered
  • Create a set of images which fill gaps in representing topics related to AI

In contrast with much existing imagery which reinforces hype and speculation about the diffusion of AI through the economy, the competition aims to produce a range of images that better visualise the ways in which AI and digital technologies are transforming work in practice and its impacts for different groups of workers, employers, trade unions and communities.  

Our research identifies some of the real problems and opportunities for ordinary working people and those looking for work that can be understood in the here and now.  However, the imagery available to illustrate how work might be changing is limited. It is often focused on the technology in sanitised high tech warehouses, white collar business environments, or on young ‘digital nomads’ in beautiful locations. We urgently need a wider range of images that can help society to visualise real world transformations that are already underway—and how this impacts on people in their working and daily lives.

Google image searches for ‘Future of Work’ often result in white, science fiction robots, indicating that workers will be replaced by robots:

“Digital transformation” searches show a lot of “Minority Report” style images, with white suited people virtually orchestrating holographic elements by pressing icons, not showing any of the real world people, processes, or real technologies involved.

The challenge is to come up with new ways of portraying digital transformations by focusing instead on the realities, examples, places, characteristics and impacts.

You can find out more about these realities in the following section: The Four Themes.


To help focus ideas and narrow down the amount of research needed to enter, we are proposing four themes related to the research. You can enter images for one or multiple themes. In each one we are asking you to either consider your perspective or how you might visually explore the following questions:

Finding: Digital adoption is still patchy and investment in digital skills training is low

  • Only just over a third of employers had invested in new digital technologies and non-adopters were hesitant about investing in the near future. 
  • Some small firms in particular are at risk of falling behind. 
  • While employers were finding it difficult to recruit workers with the necessary skills, there was limited investment in training.
  • In manufacturing and finance organisations we found that AI is being used for specific (often repetitive tasks) tasks but has not, as yet, resulted in job losses. 
  • However, AI use in some creative and digital small businesses suggests that young people may find it harder to gain the level of digital skills required for entry level jobs.

Feel free to come up with your way of visualising the challenge and recommendation area. Or you might wish to consider the following:

  • How we are adopting technologies either in specific situations or collectively
  • Whether they are helpful, or control and restrain us 
  • Whether they are helping us think creatively or helping us all think the same way
  • Which capabilities or practices might it be improving, and which might it be reducing or degrading
  • The factors that influence adoption rates

Digital exclusion is creating and exacerbating new forms of inequality

  • ‘Digital by default’ welfare policies are a barrier to work for jobseekers with low levels of digital literacy. These barriers include data poverty, a reliance on smart phones for complex tasks rather than computers, dependence on shared devices, and reliance on intermediaries to get online.
  • Digital technologies can also help to build inclusionary ways of working that particularly benefit women, disabled people and ethnic minorities. However, people from these groups can also experience downsides of digitalisation. 

Feel free to come up with your way of visualising the challenge and recommendation area. Or you might wish to consider the following:

  • Examples of what it means for digital at work to be for the benefit of all, and who the all are
  • How you can include people in the change
  • Who has currently have been left behind – What fields they work in, and how it happens, and what their exclusion looks like

Finding: Technology adoption is facilitating experimentation with how, when and where people work, as firms adopt new business models and/or working time arrangements.

  • Some platform companies have established ‘privatised’ forms of social and employment protections (like sick pay), but these provide less protection for the self-employed compared to standard ‘worker’ or ‘employee’ contracts
  • Impacts can vary in different sectors: most musicians do not earn much from streaming; travel content creators experience precarious income streams; quick commerce companies are moving from direct employment to self-employed contractors. 
  • Positive experiments include agile working in the NHS and a four-day working week that can enable organisations and individuals to benefit.

Feel free to come up with your way of visualising the challenge and recommendation area. Or you might wish to consider the following:

  • What kind of contracts are now becoming common, and what does this mean for workers?
  • What digital jobs might be good jobs? (Consider for example, digital nomads, content creators who have the freedom  to travel and flexibility, and others who have found new ways of working)
  • Or whether we are becoming digital slaves – tied to automated schedules and surveillance and managed by algorithm
  • Whether we can have both types of jobs at once, and what the gap looks like
  • What does changes mean for relationships between workers and employers

Supporting more extensive, society-wide, inclusive, ‘digital dialogues’ will be key to improve productivity, wellbeing and inclusion

  • Questions about how to accelerate responsible adoption of technology in public and private sectors should go hand in hand with questions about how to harness technology to improve people’s everyday working lives. 
  • Our research shows that giving workers a voice can help to realise and share the benefits of technology at work.

Feel free to come up with your way of visualising the challenge and recommendation area. Or you might wish to consider the following:

  • What it means to talk about technology, and who is included
  • Whether everyone who is involved who should be
  • If not, who is decision making or consultation limited to?
  • What it might look like to have meaningful or equitable conversations about digital transformation and the future of work

For all themes, you may wish to ask yourself one or more of the following questions to help with representing intangible or disembodied concepts:

  • What industry am I interested in? 
  • Who is involved in the technology? How can we represent them authentically?
  • Who else is involved? How? And where?
  • Are there processes or technologies which can be represented?
  • How can you accurately reflect the properties of data and technology – for example the statistical vs emotional nature of AI?
  • How can you be realistic about the capabilities and performance of technologies?
  • Are you more interested in communicating physical elements, or concepts?
  • What is usually visible and invisible to people?
  • What mood do you want to convey? Are you optimistic/ positive or pessimistic/ critical?
  • Who do you think would benefit from seeing this picture and why?
  • Do you want to focus on a particular detail, or wider social or technical systems?
  • What concerns or reassures you? What excites or depresses you?
  • How might you convey nuance, ambiguity or tensions?
  • What are the wider people, social, environmental or economic implications?

We welcome a range of approaches to visualising the themes and challenges, drawing on your own practice and ideas. 

A (non-exhaustive) list of approaches we welcome:

  • Remixing or collage from existing materials (AIoAI)
  • Realism – showing a scene 
  • New metaphors – conveying concepts through more familiar references
  • Showing the output of any digital technologies used in the creation of the image
  • Storytelling 
  • Iconography – creating new visual shortcuts or language to signify aspects you want to address
  • Focus on portraying very specific use cases, examples, industries, technologies

In all cases, we are looking for images which:

  1. Convey current digital work or transformation as it is now, not in the future
  2. Are visually compelling and high quality – they could realistically be in a commercial image library
  3. Show the AI or technology in the picture somehow so people looking can see it is about digital / tech/ AI 
  4. Are original work, accompanied by a roughly 75 to 250 word description of what is in the picture, how it relates to the (named) theme and what technique you have used
  5. (Optional) reflect the significance of people (for example, in designing, governing, contributing to, or being impacted by digital work) 

Based on research leading to the Guide to Better Images of AI, which should be read before you start, here is a list of things to avoid in your entry:

  • Human brains
  • Science fiction (usually white) robots
  • Anthropomorphism
  • ‘Creation of Adam’ touching hands
  • Unnecessary use of the colour blue to signify AI
  • Science fiction references or speculative future/fantasy
  • Descending code
  • Unnecessary white people in suits
  • Unnecessary holography
  • Magical or monolithic representations of AI

An online briefing session will be held on Thursday 17th April at 12pm UTC +1 and is now available for you to watch below.

Please contact info@betterimagesofai.org if you have any questions not answered above.

Winners of public competition with Cambridge Diversity Fund announced

An image with the text 'Winners Announced!" at the top in maroon. Below it in slightly lighter purple text it states: 'Reihaneh Golpayegani for Women and AI' and 'Janet Turra for Ground Up and Spat Out'. Their two images are positioned on the image at a slant each in opposite directions. At the bottom, there is a maroon banner with the text 'University Diversity Fund' in white, the CFI logo in white, and the Better Images of AI logo.

At the end of 2024, we launched a public competition with Cambridge Diversity Fund calling for images that reclaimed and recentred the history of diversity in AI education at the University of Cambridge.

We were so grateful to receive such a diverse range of submissions that provided rich interpretations of the brief and focused on really interesting elements of AI history.

Dr Aisha Sobey set and judged the challenge, which was enabled by funding from Cambridge Diversity Fund. Entries were judged on meeting the brief, the forms of representation reflected in the image, appropriateness, relevance, uniqueness, and visual appeal.

We are delighted to announce the winners and their winning entries:

First Place Prize

Awarded to Reihaneh Golpayegani for ‘Women and AI’

The left side incorporates a digital interface, showing code snippets, search queries, and comments referencing Woolf’s ideas, including discussions about Shakespeare’s fictional sister, Judith. The overlay of coding elements highlights modern interpretations of Woolf’s work through the lens of data and AI.

The center depicts a dimly lit, minimalist room with a window, dessk, and wooden floors and cupboards. The right side features a collage of Cambridge landmarks, historical photographs of women, and a black and white figure in Edwardian attire. There is a map of Cambridge in the background, which is overlayed with images of old fountain pens and ink, books, and a handwritten letter.

This image is inspired by Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own. According to this essay, which is based on her lectures at Newnham College and Girton College, Cambridge University, two things are essential for a woman to write fiction: money and a room of her own. This image adds a new layer to this concept by bringing it into the Al era.

Just as Woolf explored the meaning of “women and fiction”, defining “women and AI” is quite complex. It could refer to algorithms’ responses to inquiries involving women, the influence of trending comments on machine stereotypes, or the share of women in big tech. The list can go on and involve many different experiences of women with AI as developers, users, investors, and beyond. With all its complexity, Woolf’s ideas offer us insight: Allocating financial resources and providing safe spaces-in reality and online- is necessary for women to have positive interactions with AI and to be well-represented in this field.

Download ‘Women and AI’ from the Better Images of AI library here

About the artist:

Reihaneh Golpayegani is a law graduate and digital art enthusiast. Reihaneh is interested in exploring the intersection of law, art, and technology by creating expressive artworks and pursuing my master’s studies in this area.

Commendation Prize

Awarded to Janet Turra for ‘Ground Up and Spat Out’

The outputs of Large Language Models do seem uncanny often leading people to compare the abilities of these systems to thinking, dreaming or hallucinating. This image is intended to be a tongue-in-cheek dig, suggesting that AI is at its core, just a simple information ‘meat grinder,’ feeding off the words, ideas and images on the internet, chopping them up and spitting them back out. The collage also makes the point that when we train these models on our biased, inequitable world the responses we get cannot possibly differ from the biased and inequitable world that made them.

Download ‘Ground up and Spat Out’ from the Better Images of AI library here.

About the artist:

Janet Turra is a photographer, ceramicist and mixed media artist based in East Cork, Ireland. Her fine arts career spans over 25 years, a career which has taken many turns in rhythm with the changing phases of her life. Continually challenging the concept of perception, however, her art has taken on many themes including self, identity, motherhood and more recently our perception of AI and how it relates to the female body. 

Background to the competition

Cambridge and LCFI researchers have played key roles in identifying how current stock images of AI can perpetuate negative gender and racial stereotypes about the creators, users, and beneficiaries of AI.

The winning entries will be used for outward-facing posting on social media, University of Cambridge websites, internal communications on student sites and Virtual Learning Environments. They will also be made available for wider Cambridge programs to use for their teaching and events materials. They are also both available in the Better Images of AI library here and here for anyone to freely download and use under a Creative Commons License.

“This project grew from the desire of CFI and multiple collaborations with Better Images of AI to have better images of AI in relation to the teaching and learning we do at the Centre, and from my research into the ‘lookism’ of generative AI image models. I am hopeful that the process has been valuable to illuminate different challenges of doing this kind of work and further that the images offer alternative and exciting perspectives to the representation of diversity in learning and teaching AI at the University.” – Aisha Sobey, University of Cambridge (Postdoctoral Researcher)

An additional collection of images from Hanna

As part of this project, collage artist and scholar, Hanna Barakat, was commissioned to design a collection of images which draw upon her work researching AI narratives and marginalised communities to uncover and reclaim diverse histories. You can find the collection in the Better Images of AI library and we’ll also be releasing an additional blog post which focuses on Hanna’s collection as well as the challenges/reflections on this competition brief.