Jeroen Leon

Netherlands

Jeroen is a digital artist based in Amsterdam who is passionate about creating immersive visual experiences. His journey into digital art took shape while he lived in Barcelona, where he began developing his own distinctive approach to three-dimensional visualisations. By distilling the tension between nature and humanity into surreal, color-driven dimensions, he invites viewers to momentarily step outside the ordinary, into spaces where intuition leads, meaning unfolds slowly, and the unknown feels strangely familiar. Through dreamlike landscapes, Jeroen explores the edges of perception, weaving in conceptual threads from real life: physical distance, tangibility, and limiting beliefs. Each piece reflects unseen connections between imagination and reality, encouraging viewers to question their perspectives and immerse themselves in unexpected dimensions.


Jeroen's work comes to life through large-scale projections that transform spaces into immersive, surreal environments. Exhibited in cities from Hong Kong to New York, these installations invite audiences to step into a visual experience that blurs the line between the digital and the tangible, turning each location into a moment of escape and reflection.


Jeroen_Leon_3D.png

A Brand New Day - Horizontal

A_Brand_New_Day_-_Horizontal_Jeroen_Leon_3D.mp4

Nature is a language I return to often in my work. I select grasses and flowers with great attention. They are not background detail. They are texture, rhythm, and feeling. They shape the atmosphere as much as any structure. Even the skies carry a personal history. Many come from photographs taken by friends, family, or myself. They are real skies that existed at specific moments, seen by someone, felt by someone. When they appear in my work, they bring a trace of that moment with them. A memory, quietly embedded into something new.


These symbols are part of a larger intention. I want to create spaces that are not only visually immersive, but emotionally open. Spaces that suggest rather than declare. Spaces that ask the viewer to find their own place within them.

technique

3d

format

landscape

duration

00:40

year

2024

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More from Jeroen Leon

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Generative art
Generative art refers to a way of creating artworks using an autonomous system. In digital art, these are usually generated from code and algorithms created by the artist, often with certain predefined parameters or systems. Although these parameters guide the final outcome of the work, generative art is generally a surprising way to create artworks, as the results are often unexpected and the number of possible outcomes can be infinite.
AI
AI art is a branch of generative art that uses artificial intelligence. Unlike other generative artworks, AI artworks use specific complex algorithms and models derived from machine learning. The most common methods for creating AI art today are GANs (generative adversarial networks) or proprietary prompting platforms such as ChatGPT, Sora, Midjourney, or Dall-e.
3D
3D art uses 3D software such as Blender, Cinema4D, Houdini, or video game software such as Unity to create works of art. In 3D works, artists can either arrange assets (the 'objects' in a 3D artwork or world) that they have created themselves or purchased from other creators to create elaborate environments and scenes (an approach to 3D art called 'set dressing'), or specialize in sculpting, which involves creating their own objects and assets.
Photogrammetry
Photogrammetry is a specialized 3D technique that allows 3D objects to be created from numerous photographs taken of an object or scene from multiple angles. These photos are then compiled to determine the specific positioning, shape, and dimensions of the object in space, and then converted into a 3D model. Initially developed for engineering and urban planning, photogrammetry has become a way for artists to produce extremely accurate 3D models from real-life images.
Collage
An extension of the traditional, plastic approach to collage, digital collage involves searching for and cutting out multiple images, extracting them from their original context, and recomposing them in a new arrangement to create a work of art. Artists can use their own photographs or find images on the internet.
Illustration
Digital illustrations are created using software such as Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, or Procreate. As with drawing on paper, the artist uses a stylus to sketch a figure or object, usually on a tablet, to construct a scene or artistic universe. Unlike traditional drawing methods, digital illustration is much more forgiving, as mistakes can be easily corrected and drawn elements and objects can be easily moved around within a scene.
Video
Video artworks primarily use a recording camera, but may sometimes include additional post-processing or editing to distort, modify or add additional elements to the image. Some artists use state-of-the-art recording equipment to create macro zoom-ins or time lapses, privileging fidelity to the subject matter. Others use additional softwares to significantly modify or warp the video, creating an alternative perspective on the world that surrounds us.

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