When Google Couldn’t Help: How AI Helped Me Track Down an Elusive Image

George Tooker's "Government Bureau" (1956)

Recently I found myself in a situation where “Googling” was useless. I was trying to recall a work of art without knowing the artist, title, or even the country of origin.

Note: At some point in my life I had seen George Tooker’s “Government Bureau” (1956) – a striking image (above) that had burrowed into my memory. But I lacked the descriptors that would work in a traditional text-based search.

Armed with nothing but a vague sense of the era and the artwork’s elusive “feel,” I turned to Meta AI for assistance. What followed was a bit magical—a journey through memory cubicles that led me to the masterpiece I sought.

It began with this prompt

You’ll notice that my prompt tells Meta AI “who it is.” That’s a critical step in getting any AI to approach the task from a more specified perspective.

Next, I outlined the Q and A process we would use. This was essential, since I wanted the AI to ask follow up questions to narrow in on a solution. For fun, I gave it a bit personality – “genial and collaborative.” Also note that I incorrectly say it’s a black and white image.

Here’s a screenshots of Meta AI’s first response- the questions were logical – style, time period and where I might have seen it.

My response gave a date range but really focused on how the “feel” of the image in my memory – I said “Eastern European Kafka-esque bureaucratic workplace.”

In its second response, Meta AI noted my “Kafka-esque vibe” (a clever rephrasing). It pointed me to artists like Grosz and Dix. (I checked those artists and didn’t see any possibilities) And it posed a few more questions on how I remembered the faces and tone.

The best I could recall about the faces was they were blank and fearful. I added that the faces were “realistic with an overlay of artistic enhancement.” (Not the best description I’ve ever crafted.)

By Meta AI’s third response, it had correctly identified Tooker as a possibility.

I suddenly remembered the artist and asked to see some samples. Meta AI then pointed me to Google search of Tooker works (below) and there it was in upper left.

I was so impressed, I congratulated Meta AI for solving my query in such short order. It seemed like the thing to do. After some pleasantries, we signed off.

Comparing AIs

After this success with Meta AI, I thought I’d try the same prompt with other leading AIs. Note: I pretended not to know the answer and kept my responses limited to just the information I gave to Meta AI on the first run.

I was using the free versions. Here’s how they compared:

  • Meta AI (above)- Identified artist in 3rd response and linked to “Government Bureau” in 4th.
  • MicroSoft CoPilot – Identified artist and suggested it might be “Government Bureau” in 3rd response.
  • Anthropic Claude – On it’s 9th response, it mentions Tooker but hallucinated a title he did not create.
  • Google Gemini – Keeps suggesting artists and on 6th response, it gave up and wished me luck.
  • Perplexity – gives up after 5th response. (But it did begin with a fun opening response: “clears throat and adjusts monocle. Ah, I believe I may know the work you are describing, my dear fellow! Let me ask you a few questions to jog your memory”
  • ChatGPT 3.5 – patiently guessed and seemed to get closer to style. But I quit after 11th response when its suggestions began to drift off track.

Here’s why AI beats a traditional search engine in this use case:

A traditional search engine like Google relies heavily on keywords and metadata. When you search for an image, it looks for matches based on text associated with images across the web, such as titles, descriptions, tags, and other textual content. This means you need to have some specific information or keywords related to the image to start your search.

AI-driven image retrieval systems use machine learning algorithms to understand the content of the images themselves. They can analyze visual elements such as color, shape, texture, and even abstract concepts like the emotion an image might evoke. This allows them to find matches based on visual similarity rather than relying solely on text descriptors.

So, if you’re using AI for this purpose, you don’t necessarily need to know specific details about the artwork. You can provide a description of what you remember, and the AI can interpret that description to find images that are visually similar to what you’re describing. It’s a more intuitive process that mimics the way humans might try to find something based on vague recollections, rather than the precise keyword matching used by traditional search engines

Getting Started with the AI Toolkit

AI-generated with Lexica. I used prompt: “A steampunk tool box in a mysterious setting

I’ve been exploring AI use for teachers and students for the past view months. I recently was interviewed by Aaron Maurer for his educator’s podcast “Peter Pappas And How AI Is Challenging Educators To Rethink Practices Of Teaching And Learning

Listen on Apple Podcast

Listen on Spotify


Here’s an AI Toolkit that I designed to assist students and teachers with integrating AI into teaching and learning. This is reposted from my course website: EdTechMethods


Since the recent launch of ChatGPT – Artificial intelligence (AI) tools are in the news. Here’s a brief list of AI tools and resources. All are free (or have free intro promotions). We will be integrating them into our course over the semester.


OUr Course AI Policy

You are free to use AI tools in this course for your weekly assignments. Some assignments – like this week’s – will require it. You are free to use AI in creative ways. But be sure to always site AI use as noted in #1 below. See my example at the end of this page.

Be aware of the limits of ChatGPT and other text generating apps:

  1. AI is a tool, but one that you need to acknowledge using. Please include a paragraph at the end of any assignment that uses AI explaining what you used AI for and what prompts you used to get the results. Failure to do so is in violation of academic honesty policies.
  2. If you provide minimum effort prompts, you will get low quality results.
  3. You will need to refine your prompts in order to get good outcomes. This will take work.
  4. Don’t trust anything it says. If it gives you a number or fact, assume it is wrong unless you either know the answer or can check in with another source. You will be responsible for any errors or omissions provided by the tool. It works best for topics you understand.
  5. Be thoughtful about when this tool is useful. Don’t use it if it isn’t appropriate for the case or circumstance.
  6. AI is a tool. It is not always the right tool. Consider carefully whether, given its weaknesses, it is right for the purpose to which you are planning to apply it.
  7. There are many ethical concerns you need to be aware of. AI can be used to infringe on copyright, or to cheat, or to steal the work of others, or to manipulate. And how a particular AI model is built and who benefits from its use are often complex issues, and not particularly clear at this stage. Ultimately, you are responsible for using these tools in an ethical manner. Be transparent about how you use AI, and take responsibility for the output you create ~ adapted from Ethan Mollick

Start Here: How to use AI to do Practical Stuff: A New Guide

And  Seven Ways of Using AI in Class
writing Tools – type in prompt / get a text response
  • Access GPT4 without a key or invitation on Hugging Face. | Link
  • ChatGPT | Link. First create an OpenAI account to log in (registration may require a phone number)
  • Best option if ChatGPT is down, use  OpenAI Playground
  • Perplexity | Link Better at looking information up than generating new ideas. But shows sources and lets you edit them out or add new sources. [Click 3 dots in upper right of the response.]
How to Create writing Prompts
AI Plagiarism Detectors
  • GPTZero. Built for educators. Paste in text and see if its created by AI | Link
  • GPT-2 Output Detector – Paste in text and see if its created by AI | Link

image Tools – Type in descriptors (or upload image) / get an image response
  • Lexica | Link Requires sign up (my favorite of this group)
  • DALL-E | Link Requires sign up
  • Midjourney | A powerful image generator on Discord. Link to QuickStart guide
  • Image Maker | Link Free to use Stable Diffusion-powered text to image generator
  • Karlo Generator| Link Can be a bit wonky and only produces low resolution images, but no sign up needed.
  • Image Mixer | Link Combine multiple images into one. No sign up needed
How to Create Image Prompts
  • How to use AI image prompts to generate art (this post references Microsoft Designer, but tips work with all image generators) | Link to article
  • DALLE-E Prompt Book | Link

Audio / Video Tools
  • AssemblyAI – extract transcription, summary or topic detection from a video | Link
  • Google Speech-to-Text | Link | Free sign up
  • Google Text-to-Speech | Link | Free sign up

AI note for this page: I elected to use AI to generate a featured image for this page. Thought it would be proof of concept. I used Lexica and this prompt: “A steampunk tool box in a mysterious setting.” It took me a number of tries to add descriptor prompts to get something I wanted. The final image included some elements that make no sense – what’s the “screen” at right and cables in foreground? Mysterious?

Our first AI Lesson