I think a big issue I take with the removal of humans from art creation, or at least discussions around it, is that art is always talked about as being separate from the creator. As a product the person makes.
For many pieces of art, and what draws me to art, is knowing that the creator put a piece of themselves into it. (I'm going to avoid talking about the 'separating art from the artist' discussion, that's separate than what I'm discussing here).
An example I've talked about in the past on HN is Raymond Carver. Carver's short stories are often centered around blue-collar men in the mid west. This is because Carver was a blue-collar man from the mid west. I find that interesting. I enjoy reading about Carver's life, and reading about what people had to say about him.
Essentially, write what you know.
Art made by AI is missing that - and I think the frustrating part for me is that I don't think it's that hard to bring it back.
Show me the prompts used for the art. Tell me why you used those specific prompts. What did those prompts mean to you? I want to know all of those things.
I also think people stop too soon. Why not take what the AI has made, do something to it yourself, and then feed it back into the AI to see what happens?