
landscape
generative art
01:07
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.

Glitch is pure play. The whole thing started from one question I kept asking: what can I do to a pixel so that pixels stop being boring? Underneath both pieces the same soft moving blobs of color drift behind everything, the way they do in Bakhoor Assandal and Vapor, and the game is to pixelate that hidden field in deliberately strange ways, letting the pixels themselves become the subject.
Here the pixels are warped and stretched into a screen, and the blurred field of moving blobs shows through them, blush pink and rose melting through teal, indigo, and ribbons of red. It reads like television static caught in the act of turning to liquid, structured and dissolving at the same time.
generative art
landscape
01:07
2023