Process

Intro

The work develops through exploratory, process-driven methods rather than fixed outcomes. Different pieces may use different tools or media, but they share an emphasis on systems, iteration, and attention to form as it emerges over time.


How the work begins

Projects typically begin with a question or constraint rather than a finished image. This might involve a visual structure, a behavioral rule, or a technical limitation that sets the initial conditions for exploration.

Early stages focus on testing possibilities—running variations, observing patterns, and identifying moments of interest or tension.


Working with systems

Much of the work is shaped by systems that combine rule-based logic with variability. Parameters are adjusted, rules are refined, and results are generated repeatedly, allowing form to arise through interaction rather than direct composition.

Chance plays a role, but it is guided and edited rather than left uncontrolled.


Medium and output

Outcomes may take the form of still images, animations, or other digital artifacts. The choice of medium is not fixed in advance but follows from the behavior of the system and the qualities that emerge during development.

Final works are selected from a larger field of generated material, often representing a particular state or moment within an ongoing process.


Revision and selection

Selection is a critical stage. Works are evaluated for clarity, coherence, and resonance rather than technical complexity alone. Many iterations are discarded in order to arrive at a small number of resolved pieces.


Continuity

Individual works are not treated as isolated objects but as part of a broader, evolving practice. Systems are revisited, extended, or reworked across different projects, allowing ideas to persist and transform over time.