‘Another tool in my tool bag’: Digital artist uses AI to collage KC Streetcar stop

July 18, 2025  |  Julie Denesha

David Morris works in his home studio in Shawnee, Kansas. His latest abstract digital collage is called “Music is Community," and it’s part of this year’s Art in the Loop program; photo by Julie Denesha, KCUR

Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter.

Artificial intelligence had a hand in a new art installation at a Kansas City Streetcar stop; David Morris’ abstract digital collage is called ‘Music is Community,’ part of this year’s Art in the Loop program

When Kansas City photographer and digital artist David Morris set out to find a way to connect Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District with the Historic 18th and Vine district for an installation at a streetcar stop, he turned to artificial intelligence to kickstart the process.

“I love jazz, and music is sort of like the universal language,” Morris said he asked himself. “So how can I incorporate all that into one visual?”

His abstract digital collage “Music is Community” is the result. It combines two opposing faces layered in rich, warm tones with musical notes and instruments.

The artwork is a part of this year’s Art in the Loop project, installed at the Kauffman Center southbound streetcar stop, at 16th and Main streets.

“I’ve always felt like there was a disconnect between the 18th and Vine and Crossroads Arts District, and when I was chairman of the Crossroads for a number of years, there was always this drive to try to connect the two communities,” Morris said.

“Music is Community” is installed at the Kauffman Center southbound streetcar stop, at 16th and Main streets; image courtesy of David Morris

Like most applications of artificial intelligence, its use in art is controversial. It’s sparked debates about artistic ownership and creativity, and there are concerns around copyright infringement, since AI models are often trained on protected works without the permission of artists.

The controversy has led some artists to shy away from using AI. But Morris embraces it.

“Personally, AI is another tool in my tool bag,” he said. “Now, if you use that solely to mimic someone else’s style, then I don’t think you’re necessarily a good artist.”

Using AI is just the first in Morris’ multistep creative process to make sure that he creates authentic works. He uses a display tablet to layer in brush strokes much like an artist would use a paintbrush on a canvas.

“It’s just one tool, and I’ll take that (image) into Photoshop. I might use one piece out of it,” he said. “The brushes that you can make yourself or that you can buy just are mind blowing of what they can do and accomplish.”

Morris uses a display tablet to layer in brush strokes much like an artist would use a paintbrush on a canvas. It’s part of a multistep creative process to make sure that he creates authentic works of art; photo by Julie Denesha, KCUR

Morris is a retired commercial and fine art photographer who’s lately transitioned to abstract digital art. For decades, his advertising photography was included in global campaigns for major clients like AMC Theaters and The Hershey Co. His work also appeared on Times Square billboards and in publications like the Kansas City Star and Martha Stewart magazine.

“But during the pandemic, photography sort of shut down,” Morris said. “I retired and I was sort of looking for something else besides photography.”

A YouTube video led him to start exploring AI in 2020. He said it’s opened the door to a new form of expression.

“You can train these things to essentially express your personal vision. Again, it’s just one tool to make what you see in your mind, able to put it on a piece of paper or on a screen,” he said.

David Morris checks out the digital collage after it was installed in late May at the Kauffman Center streetcar stop; photo by Andrezza Scala, Art In The Loop Foundation

Photography itself created anxiety for artists when it was invented in the early 19th century. Some saw it as a revolutionary tool and others saw it as a threat that lacked the artistic expression and skill of painting.

“From today, painting is dead!” French painter Paul Delaroche declared after seeing one of the first daguerreotypes at an 1840 exhibition.

But photography is now a widely accepted form of art, and Morris thinks artists will come around on AI, too.

“I understand, especially early on, people would put in their prompt: ‘Make me an oil painting that looks like Jackson Pollock.’ And it will do it, amazingly,” Morris said. “But that’s not you. That’s not your art. That’s mimicking of somebody else’s art.”

Instead, Morris said, art comes from within.

“(A) famous photographer once said, you’re fooling yourself if you think that the tools that you use create the art,” Morris said. “It’s your heart and mind and vision and soul that creates the art.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Kansas city startup funding

        Most-funded tech startups: $100M-plus investment puts PayIt on the map with C2FO

        By Tommy Felts | April 19, 2019

        Companies in the Midwest and South are making major plays for investment dollars, according to CB Insights, with Kansas City’s PayIt and C2FO earning spots on the latest map of the nation’s most well-funded tech startups. “The tech boom has diffused beyond the traditional hotbeds of California, New York, and Massachusetts, across the entire United…

        Prime Digital Academy

        Prime Digital Academy pledges $20K in scholarships to boost inclusion in KC tech

        By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2019

        A coding boot camp that freshly arrived in Kansas City this winter plans to underwrite $20,000 in scholarships specifically for individuals who are part of demographics underrepresented in the coding profession, said Rachael Bromander. “At a time in the market where tech talent is scarce and growth is booming, programs like Prime represent a way…

        Paws up! Scollar aims to fetch 200 jobs for KC, trades Silicon Valley for Animal Health Corridor

        By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2019

        Building a business in Silicon Valley might seem sexy — but it isn’t always the right choice, Lisa Tamayo said. “I don’t know what you guys hear about the Coast, but hardware is quite challenging for any company in the Bay area because a lot of these Silicon Valley folks in San Francisco only like…

        Shari Young, Blacque Onyx Apparel

        Shari Young doesn’t want Blacque Onyx to be the next online sensation; she wants shoppers on Troost

        By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2019

        While others in the marketplace might be chasing viral success online, Shari Young has approached building her new Blacque Onyx Apparel store on Troost with a more long-term strategy, she said. “I know that in the age of social media things blow up really fast and then they’re gone — I didn’t want to be…