Rainy city street at night

The picture takes place in Vilnius, Lithuania at night in the far future, circa 2347. The weather is a relentless, freezing rain, illuminated by the neon glow of holographic advertisements and the flickering lights of automated transport vehicles. A vast, decaying Buttonbush (Tara) stands in the center of a cobblestone street, its silvery branches coated in ice. A lone, bioluminescent fox with silver-blue fur cautiously approaches the bush, sniffing the air. In the background, towering structures of polished chrome and weathered stone blend together, partially submerged in the rain-slicked streets. A small, automated drone, shaped like a dragonfly, hovers nearby, scanning the scene. The genre is Canvas paintings in Collage Painting technique by artist Jean-Antoine Watteau, utilizing a muted color palette of blues, grays, and subtle pinks, with a focus on delicate, melancholic figures and a sense of ethereal beauty amidst the urban decay. High detail, 8k resolution.

Prompt
Jean-Antoine Watteau style, Vilnius, Lithuania, night, future, rain, holographic advertisements, automated transport vehicles, Buttonbush (Tara), cobblestone street, fox, chrome, stone, drone, dragonfly, Jean-Antoine Watteau, Canvas paintings, Collage Painting technique, muted color palette, delicate, melancholic figures, urban decay, ethereal beauty HD, sharp focus, stunningly beautiful, DMT Art Style, bright colors, surreal visuals, swirling patterns, DMT art style

Negative prompt
verybadimagenegative, bad_prompt_version2-neg, easynegative, FastNegativeV2, ugly, deformed, noisy, blurry, low contrast, extra eyes, bad eyes, ugly eyes, imperfect eyes, deformed pupils, deformed iris, cross-eyed, poorly drawn face, bad face, fused face, ugly face, worst face, unrealistic skin texture, out of frame, poorly drawn hands, cloned face, double face, blurry, bad quality

Jean-Antoine Watteau never actually painted this. It is an AI-generated image mimicking the artist.

Text model: gemma3

Image model: ZaxiousXL

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)