Expert: AI expands creation, but cannot replace meaningful innovation
While generative artificial intelligence (AI) continues to reshape creative industries, a United States-based Chinese design award jury has reiterated that meaningful innovation lies in maintaining authenticity while engaging thoughtfully with complex societal issues.
Ziwei Song, an internationally recognized designer with over 20 prestigious international honors, hopes young Chinese designers, particularly those navigating multicultural environments, will engage more confidently with international platforms.
She noted that while AI can support ideation and accelerate workflows, it cannot replace the empathy, judgment, and social awareness designers bring to their work.
Having been invited to join the International Jury of the 2026 A' Design Award & Competition, she stressed that she remains firmly committed to human-centered design, thinking that while AI has dramatically expanded creative possibilities, it has also elevated expectations around authenticity, responsibility and intent.
Experts say that in 2026, as rapid technological shifts continue to reshape societies around the world, design has moved far beyond the realm of visual aesthetics, having become a critical force in redefining social logic and addressing complex global challenges.
With Song's top honors, including the Red Dot: Design Concept, Red Dot: Brands & Communication Design, and the A' Design Gold Award, her involvement reflects the growing international recognition of Chinese designers as influential contributors to global design standards.
"Within the A' Design Award's blind peer-review and quantitative scoring system, we are no longer looking for pixel-perfect execution," Song said. "What matters most is the depth of intent behind the work."
In her view, truly exceptional design goes beyond technical tools, reflecting human-centered values through original thinking and meaningful responses to real-world challenges such as climate change, aging populations, and cultural fragmentation.
Based in North America while maintaining strong cultural ties to China, Song occupies a distinctive cross-cultural position. This perspective has enabled her to connect Western design logic with Eastern philosophical thinking, translating both into a design language that is universal and globally resonant.
Song's experience across international design juries is defined by both breadth and depth. Her work includes reviewing and evaluating cutting-edge digital interactions at the Orpetron Web Design Awards, examining the narrative foundations of brand systems at the World Brand Design Society (WBDS), and now taking part in the evaluation process of the A' Design Award, widely regarded as one of the most influential design competitions worldwide.
Unlike traditional, highly subjective assessments, she noted, that the A' Design Award applies a structured and quantitative evaluation framework. In its 2026 criteria, originality and sustainability, alongside aesthetics and functionality, have emerged as decisive dimensions of design quality.
As Song sees it, truly exceptional design goes beyond technical tools, reflecting human-centered values through original thinking and meaningful responses to real-world challenges such as climate change, aging populations and cultural fragmentation.
Drawing on her experience as both a practicing designer and an international jury member, Song has observed a clear shift away from an exclusive focus on technical skill acquisition toward a broader emphasis on systemic and strategic design thinking.
"Future designers should not be mere producers of aesthetics; they must become coordinators of complex social systems," she said, advocating for interdisciplinary education models that encourage students to explore the intersections of data, technology, ethics and culture.
From an award-winning participant to an invited expert in international evaluation systems, Song's professional journey reflects the broader evolution of Chinese design from aesthetic participation to leadership within global discourse.
She said: "Taking part in the international jury is not simply about identifying outstanding work. It is also about helping define new standards for global design in an AI-driven future, while safeguarding the essential human values at the heart of creative practice."




























