
landscape
generative art
04:00
2023
Melissa Wiederrecht is an American algorithmic generative artist who has lived and worked in Makkah, Saudi Arabia for the past decade. Trained in computer science, machine learning, and AI, she has been making generative art for over twenty years, since long before it had a name or an audience, and now exhibits internationally. She calls her work a "precise blur." Precise, because it is built entirely from mathematical code systems she writes herself. Blur, because what those systems produce is paradox, ambiguity, and in-betweenness. She works in the oscillation, the both/and: art that is extremely intentional yet overflowing with randomness, cold and mathematical yet emotionally moving, obviously a painting and obviously not, a single frozen frame and an infinite algorithm at once. Running through all of it is a bringing-together of traditional values and ancient forms with the most modern of media, code.
Melissa Wiederrecht has exhibited at the United Nations Headquarters, the Museum of the Moving Image, Gucci Art Space, Gazelli Art House, Art Dubai Digital, Art Blocks, and Feral File, among many others. Her work has also been showcased at prominent international venues and platforms, including HeK Basel, Unit London, GalerieData in Paris, Verse, VerticalCrypto Art (Berlin), and ArtRepublic Global during Miami Art Basel. Reflecting her impact on the digital art community, she was nominated for the Diversity Award at The Crypties by Decrypt Media in 2023.

Folded Rings grew out of a shader technique I love and am genuinely proud of: the whole piece is written in GLSL, which means building the image backwards, by folding space itself. You draw a line or a circle and fold the space around it, and the pattern falls out of the geometry. It is the same pattern engine behind Calculated Stars and Misbah. Misbah holds it still; Calculated Stars lets it vary across the whole canvas; here it works per ring, every ring carrying its own unique pattern, growing outward from the center, and each pattern moving. Where this engine once drew fine lines, here I thicken them into solid, gradient-filled shapes, so the whole thing becomes an explosion of color. Each iteration draws its colors at random from a wide spectrum, so no two share a palette, and every one finds its own mood: some like a fiesta or a samba, some closer to woven or aboriginal pattern, all a little kaleidoscopic but never a plain kaleidoscope. There is no hidden message here; it is aesthetic delight and, frankly, technical virtuosity: the joy of color, pattern, and motion, and the craft of pulling it off in pure shader code. A blazing orange and gold sun at the centre, ringed by deep navy and purple with small rosette satellites.
generative art
landscape
04:00
2023