Several archaeologists have slated the British Museum after it shared images containing AI-generated content on its Instagram and Facebook accounts. The posts, which quickly drew backlash online after being posted on January 27, were removed later the same day.
The images show what appears to be the same young woman in various outfits gazing thoughtfully at objects inside the museum. The caption read, “Taking time to take a closer look is always worthwhile,” alongside the hashtag #YourMuseum. Two accounts were tagged: one belonging to an AI-generated model and another to the AI marketing agency V8 Global. Their inclusion raised immediate questions about whether, and how, major cultural institutions should be using generative AI.
According to archaeologist and content creator Steph Black, who is a PhD student at Durham University, the post remained online for roughly six hours before being taken down. During that time, it attracted what she described as a wave of “really negative” comments, many calling on the museum to explain itself or issue an apology.
Black shared screenshots of the images on her own Instagram account, where she has nearly 200,000 followers. Shortly afterward, she told Artnet News that the British Museum unfollowed her and other creators who had publicly criticized the post. She took the move as a signal to discourage further commentary.
“They need to acknowledge what happened, explain why it happened, and who approved it,” Black said. “I want them to take accountability and commit to not using generative AI”
In a statement, a British Museum spokesperson said the institution regularly reposts “user-generated” content on social media. In this case, they said, the content had been created using AI. “We do not post AI-created images and, recognizing the potential sensitivity, removed it,” the spokesperson said. They added that, amid the growing use of AI across the sector, the museum is currently developing internal guidelines for its use.
One image shared by the museum shows an AI-generated woman looking at a real object from the collection: a Mexican stone sculpture of the Aztec fire-serpent Xiuhcoatl. Black noted that while the same AI figure appears in other images wearing traditional East Asian clothing, here she is dressed in what appears to be Mexican-style attire. “It’s as if all these cultures are the same,” she said.
