
The Collaboration: Beauty as Activism
My long-time friend and collaborator is a singer and animal-rights activist. Her mission: talk about nature’s devastation—and our role in it—without judgement or fear. “No preaching,” she says. For this album (5-6 songs, one big story split into visualiser scenes, plus a full video clip), we landed on beauty as the weapon.
Enter Super Piolha: a young version of her.
- Worries deeply about the planet and animals.
- Feels her generation doesn’t listen.
- Doesn’t know how to speak without pushing people away.
- Rejects scaring or blaming.
- Chooses beauty, music, what touches.
One song is for Sandro, a real elephant who’s spent his life alone in a zoo. They’re fighting to move him to a sanctuary, but politics, corruption, and public indifference block the way. Super Piolha sees that world too.
Her Boundary: “Aesthetics First”
In a voice message: “I want to decide on the aesthetics first.”
She hates the generic “AI internet look”—everything blending into sameness. She gives me freedom to create, but she picks the final direction (sometimes I convince her). Our vibe is always excited, trusting.
Internally? I was thrilled. I love AI for rapid sketching, tweaking generations to fit a personal aesthetic. But I didn’t want a superficial style hunt. I wanted aesthetics to surface the idea: How does Super Piolha see this broken world? What does beauty look like when it holds pain?
My Quiet Experiment: Sketches as Questions
I started manga-style—exaggerated, alive, not polished.
- She sent photos of herself. I generated Super Piolha: awkward kid with a guitar.
- Wrote scenes from her worldview.
- Generated roughs: a moodboard evolving from portrait to worlds.
Key symbols emerged (these aren’t random; they’re how the idea clarified):
- Guitar = action (her voice, breaking silence).
- Top hat = imagination/solution (magic against despair).
- Fireflies = collective life/nature’s response (small lights in darkness).
- Cages = systems, not individual villains (the structures trapping Sandro, animals, us).
The moodboard (see below) zooms out: kid → character → ecosystems of eyes, elephants, fireflies. It’s her lens on devastation, rendered beautiful. Not finals. Questions: Does this feel like your world? Does it touch without blaming?

Idea vs. Aesthetic: Where We Started, Where I Wanted to Go
She wanted aesthetics first—a safe entry point, a style she could own before committing. Fair: visuals build trust faster than abstract story.
I wanted aesthetics as doorway to idea. Start with looks to provoke: “Is this how Super Piolha fights cages? Does Sandro live in these fireflies?” AI sped up the wrongs, so we’d find the rights faster.
In practice: aesthetics led (her rule), but I steered toward her core (beauty over blame). No decision between them—they’re in tension, refining each other.
The Cliffhanger
She hasn’t seen the sketches. Not yet.
Will she embrace this world—manga energy, symbolic layers, Sandro’s quiet tragedy through glow? Or reject the “AI trace,” demand a full redraw?
I don’t know. That’s the experiment: Can aesthetics-first (even AI-assisted) lead to a deeper, more honest idea? Or does it trap us in surfaces?
To be continued: Next post, her reaction + what survives. Follow for Part 2.

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