Valentino's AI Handbag Ads Spark Backlash: Are Luxury Brands Sacrificing Artistry for Efficiency?
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Valentino's AI Handbag Ads Spark Backlash: Are Luxury Brands Sacrificing Artistry for Efficiency?

Industry Insights
ai
marketing
fashion
branding
controversy
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Summary:

  • Valentino faces intense criticism for AI-generated handbag ads called "disturbing" and "sloppy" by social media users

  • The luxury brand's Instagram post shows surreal AI visuals with models emerging from handbags and logos morphing into body parts

  • Critics accuse Valentino of choosing efficiency over artistry and engaging in "rage-baiting" with controversial content

  • Expert analysis reveals a deeper cultural tension where audiences perceive AI as cost-saving disguised as innovation

  • The backlash highlights broader industry concerns about AI displacing human workers and reducing quality in creative sectors

Italian luxury fashion house Valentino is facing intense criticism after posting "disturbing" adverts made using artificial intelligence (AI) for its new DeVain handbag.

The Controversial Instagram Post

The brand announced a collaboration with digital artists as part of what it dubbed a "digital creative project" promoting its new DeVain handbag. But an AI-generated advert it posted on Instagram has been met with intense criticism from fans, who called the visuals - and use of AI - "sloppy" and "sad".

The Instagram post promoting the handbag, which has a label to say it was made using AI, shows a "surreal" collage of models spliced between Valentino logos and its DeVain bag. At one point it shows models seemingly emerge from an ornate gold version of the handbag. At another, the brand's logo transforms into people's arms, before these morph into a coalescing swirl of bodies.

Social Media Backlash

Among hundreds of comments left on Valentino's Instagram video were many criticising its AI use as "cheap" and "lazy".

"Disappointing from a couture fashion house," wrote one user responding to the video on Instagram. "Advertising campaigns are an opportunity to put talented creatives centre stage. AI in this instance is lazy at best."

Others called on the company's marketing department to "read the room", likened the content to "AI slop" and accused the company of "rage-baiting".

The Broader Industry Context

The fashion industry, like many other creative sectors, has seized on generative AI tools which can create images and video in seconds as a way to cut production and promotion costs. It has also been cited as an opportunity to examine how new and emerging tech can enhance key processes like design, manufacturing and sizing.

But doing so has also given rise to concern its increased adoption may displace human workers, or reduce the quality of fashion products.

Expert Insight on the Cultural Tension

Anne-Liese Prem, head of cultural insights & trends at creative digital agency Loop, said although Valentino was showing "the right instinct" by being upfront about the generative AI use, backlash to it showed "a deeper cultural tension".

"The main issue is not the technology itself - it is the perception of what the technology replaces," she told the BBC. "When AI enters the visual identity of a brand, people worry that the brand is choosing efficiency over artistry. Even if the execution is creative, audiences often read it as cost-saving disguised as innovation."

Other Examples of AI Backlash in Fashion

H&M's use of AI to create "digital twins" of models for ads and social media posts sparked criticism about its effect on human models, as well as on photographers and make-up artists who play a key role on shoots.

Meanwhile, an AI-generated Guess advert spotted in Vogue earlier this year raised concerns about its impact on female beauty standards.

Ms Prem said while there were clear benefits and "new creative possibilities" for brands using AI, "the risk is equally clear".

"Without a strong emotional idea behind it, generative AI can make luxury feel less human at a moment when people want human presence more than ever," she said.

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