An AI "Barbie" and "Oppenheimer" in front of a giant Barbie wearing a hat modeled on the alien spaceship in "Nope."Pieke Roelofs
- Pieke Roelofs used AI-image generator Dream by Wombo to create Barbie memes and reaction posts.
- The Dutch artist started prompting it to weigh in on trending topics she saw on her X feed.
Dutch artist Pieke Roelofs used an AI tool to generate dozens of images of Barbie in unusual scenarios.
The poet and spoken word artist used the app Dream by Wombo to create reactionary images of Barbie that are packed with internet culture references that she could post in response to what comes up on her X feed.
Roelofs started prompting the images as a way to have fun and weigh in on topics online. But in the process, she's subverted Barbie's gaze by reimagining what it means to be a Barbie.
"For the last two weeks I've been tweeting Barbies and making remarks online on things that pop up on my feed," Roelofs told Insider.
"I was constantly spammed on my feed with Barbie because of the release of the movie and at that point, I decided to prompt an AI tool to create Barbie memes and reaction images."
Roelofs said that since Elon Musk bought X, formerly known as Twitter, she's noticed more extreme opinions showing up on her timeline. She said she now sees posts from far left and far right viewpoints constantly battling each other online.
"I was watching this happening and thought I'm going to say something that's satirical and a bit ridiculous in response," she said. "Some of them are really random posts and they're not that deep."
Take a look at some of Roelofs' AI-generated Barbie memes and reaction images.
"We ride at dawn" Barbie
Pieke Roelofs
If you use the same words in a prompt, it will not generate the exact same image again, Roelofs said: "Once you start prompting, sometimes if you're a bit vague, it starts to create very random images." She typically uses a string of words rather than one to prompt the images.
She likens the use of the AI tool to the movie "Everything Everywhere All At Once" in which one character says "everything is just a random arrangement of particles in a vibrating superposition."
Roelofs compares this quote to the use of AI as by changing a prompt's wording, it can produce an entirely different image.
Space Barbie
Pieke Roelofs
The "we ride at dawn" Barbie was created in reference to the Big Bird meme that uses the same caption. It was posted in response to a video showing the dangers of farming in Louisiana as a result of a high population of alligators.
Space Barbie with an approving expression was posted by Roelofs with the words "I approve" in response to an image and caption. It describes a woman who sparked controversy after she ripped off part of the Bible asking wives to be submissive to their husbands and used it to smoke weed.
Barbie smoking weed
Pieke Roelofs
Roelofs posted this Barbie in response to a news article about Uber filing a patent for an AI system, which could be used to tell if passengers were drunk and could be refused a ride. Alongside the Barbie image, she wrote: "One can always hotbox an Uber."
A viral American Airlines passenger turned into a Barbie
Pieke Roelofs
A TikTok of a woman accusing a fellow American Airlines passenger of not being "real" went viral in July. Many social media users used a still image from the video to post memes.
"Get in loser, we're going shopping"
Pieke Roelofs
This AI-generated image of three Barbies sat in a car references a scene from the movie "Mean Girls," in which one character tells another: "Get in loser, we're going shopping."
"Barbenheimer" meets "Nope"
Pieke Roelofs
A spaceship from the movie "Nope" was reimagined as a Barbie wearing a hat in a similar shape, as "Barbie" and "Robert Oppenheimer" look on.
The disaster girl meme turned into a Barbie
Pieke Roelofs
Roelofs turned the popular "disaster girl" meme of a child standing in front of a burning building whilst smirking into a Barbie to poke fun at Doja Cat releasing a new single.
It was a light-hearted attempt to draw attention to the performer being criticized recently for her treatment of fans.
Barbie growing weed in space
Pieke Roelofs
The artist says if using the right word as a prompt can produce an image close to what you'd visualized.
"Very often, I can get the stereotypical Barbie face if I prompt right enough," she said. "If I ask it to do way too many things, it becomes more complex because then it also starts to influence the face more and it can look a bit creepy, so you have to really be specific."
Ben Shapiro reimagined as Ken
Pieke Roelofs
After Roelofs saw references to the Barbie movie all over social media, she realized that one of the messages was that Barbie could be anyone – even the conservative writer Ben Shapiro.
"I thought, okay, if Barbie can be everything then I'm going to turn her into everything, from riding a crocodile to doing drugs and all sorts of things that are not expected," she said.
Unicorn Barbie
Pieke Roelofs
Roelofs said she enjoys making the images as it's an outlet for creative expression that can visualize her "bizarre or random thoughts."
Two Barbies referencing the "this is fine" meme
Pieke Roelofs
Roelofs posted this image with the caption "Yes, all women are conspiring against in you" in response to a tweet by controversial British influencer Andrew Tate that says to "lock up every single girlfriend and wife on the planet."
Barbie gets high
Pieke Roelofs
Images of Barbie smoking dope subvert the doll's typical depiction – just don't expect Mattel to release Weed Barbie any time soon.