<p>At first glance, it seems to be just a modern take on Johannes Vermeer's masterpiece <em>Girl with a Pearl Earring</em>. But look more closely and things get a little strange.</p>.<p>Firstly, there are two glowing earrings in the image hanging in the Mauritshuis museum in the Dutch city of The Hague. And aren't those freckles on her face actually... a slightly inhuman shade of red?</p>.<p>That's because the work -- one of several fan recreations replacing 1665 original while it's on loan for a huge Vermeer show at Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum -- was made using artificial intelligence (AI).</p>.<p>Its presence has sparked a fierce debate, with questions over whether it belongs in the hallowed halls of the Mauritshuis -- and whether it should be classed as art at all.</p>.<p>"It's controversial, so people are for it or against it," Mauritshuis press officer Boris de Munnick told<em> AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"The people who selected this, liked it, they knew that it was AI, but we liked the creation. So we chose it, and we hung it."</p>.<p>Berlin-based digital creator Julian van Dieken submitted the image after Mauritshuis asked people to send in their versions of the famous painting for an installation called <em>My Girl with a Pearl</em>.</p>.<p>Van Dieken said he had used the AI tool Midjourney -- which can generate complex pictures on the basis of a prompt, using millions of images from the internet -- and Photoshop.</p>.<p>The Mauritshuis then chose it as one of five images out of 3,482 submitted by fans that would be printed and physically hung in the room where <em>Girl with a Pearl Earring</em> is normally housed.</p>.<p>"It's surreal to see it in a museum," van Dieken wrote on Instagram.</p>.<p>The budding artists ranged in age from three to 94, depicting the "Girl" in diverse styles ranging from a puppet to a dinosaur and a piece of fruit.</p>.<p>But the decision to choose an AI-generated image sparked a backlash.</p>.<p>One artist said on the Instagram feed for the Mauritshuis exhibition that it was a "shame and an incredible insult", and dozens of others piled in.</p>.<p>A common complaint was that AI tools can breach the copyright of other artists by using their works as the base for artificially generated images.</p>.<p>Artist Eva Toorenent, of the European Guild for Artificial Intelligence Regulation, criticised what she called "unethical technology".</p>.<p>"Without the work of human artists, this program could not generate works at all," she was quoted as saying by the Dutch newspaper <em>De Volkskrant</em>.</p>.<p>"It's such a difficult question -- what is art, and what is not art?" said the Mauritshuis's de Munnick.</p>.<p>But he insisted that the museum, whose collection boasts three Vermeers and nearly a dozen Rembrandts, had not deliberately set out to make an artistic statement on AI.</p>.<p>"Our opinion is, we think it's a nice picture, we think it's a creative process," he said. "We're not the museum to discuss if AI belongs in an art museum."</p>.<p>He admitted though that "up close, you see that the freckles are a little spooky."</p>.<p>Visitors to the Mauritshuis were equally divided, he added.</p>.<p>"Younger people tend to say, it's artificial intelligence, what's new. Elderly people sometimes say we like the more traditional paintings."</p>.<p>The Mauritshuis was looking forward to the return of the real "Girl" in April, he added. The painting's fame has increased in recent years due to a 1999 novel by US author Tracy Chevalier and an ensuing Hollywood film.</p>.<p>"Well, she is beautiful in the (Rijksmuseum) exhibition... But we will be very happy when she is at home."</p>
<p>At first glance, it seems to be just a modern take on Johannes Vermeer's masterpiece <em>Girl with a Pearl Earring</em>. But look more closely and things get a little strange.</p>.<p>Firstly, there are two glowing earrings in the image hanging in the Mauritshuis museum in the Dutch city of The Hague. And aren't those freckles on her face actually... a slightly inhuman shade of red?</p>.<p>That's because the work -- one of several fan recreations replacing 1665 original while it's on loan for a huge Vermeer show at Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum -- was made using artificial intelligence (AI).</p>.<p>Its presence has sparked a fierce debate, with questions over whether it belongs in the hallowed halls of the Mauritshuis -- and whether it should be classed as art at all.</p>.<p>"It's controversial, so people are for it or against it," Mauritshuis press officer Boris de Munnick told<em> AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"The people who selected this, liked it, they knew that it was AI, but we liked the creation. So we chose it, and we hung it."</p>.<p>Berlin-based digital creator Julian van Dieken submitted the image after Mauritshuis asked people to send in their versions of the famous painting for an installation called <em>My Girl with a Pearl</em>.</p>.<p>Van Dieken said he had used the AI tool Midjourney -- which can generate complex pictures on the basis of a prompt, using millions of images from the internet -- and Photoshop.</p>.<p>The Mauritshuis then chose it as one of five images out of 3,482 submitted by fans that would be printed and physically hung in the room where <em>Girl with a Pearl Earring</em> is normally housed.</p>.<p>"It's surreal to see it in a museum," van Dieken wrote on Instagram.</p>.<p>The budding artists ranged in age from three to 94, depicting the "Girl" in diverse styles ranging from a puppet to a dinosaur and a piece of fruit.</p>.<p>But the decision to choose an AI-generated image sparked a backlash.</p>.<p>One artist said on the Instagram feed for the Mauritshuis exhibition that it was a "shame and an incredible insult", and dozens of others piled in.</p>.<p>A common complaint was that AI tools can breach the copyright of other artists by using their works as the base for artificially generated images.</p>.<p>Artist Eva Toorenent, of the European Guild for Artificial Intelligence Regulation, criticised what she called "unethical technology".</p>.<p>"Without the work of human artists, this program could not generate works at all," she was quoted as saying by the Dutch newspaper <em>De Volkskrant</em>.</p>.<p>"It's such a difficult question -- what is art, and what is not art?" said the Mauritshuis's de Munnick.</p>.<p>But he insisted that the museum, whose collection boasts three Vermeers and nearly a dozen Rembrandts, had not deliberately set out to make an artistic statement on AI.</p>.<p>"Our opinion is, we think it's a nice picture, we think it's a creative process," he said. "We're not the museum to discuss if AI belongs in an art museum."</p>.<p>He admitted though that "up close, you see that the freckles are a little spooky."</p>.<p>Visitors to the Mauritshuis were equally divided, he added.</p>.<p>"Younger people tend to say, it's artificial intelligence, what's new. Elderly people sometimes say we like the more traditional paintings."</p>.<p>The Mauritshuis was looking forward to the return of the real "Girl" in April, he added. The painting's fame has increased in recent years due to a 1999 novel by US author Tracy Chevalier and an ensuing Hollywood film.</p>.<p>"Well, she is beautiful in the (Rijksmuseum) exhibition... But we will be very happy when she is at home."</p>