
Day 8 of #genuary2025: “Draw one million of something.”
A hundred cells inside a hundred cells inside a hundred cells inside one cell. The algorithm randomly eliminates cells on the deepest level to get exactly one million.
#genuary
Day 8 of #genuary2025: “Draw one million of something.”
A hundred cells inside a hundred cells inside a hundred cells inside one cell. The algorithm randomly eliminates cells on the deepest level to get exactly one million.
#genuary
Day 7 of #genuary2025: “Use software that is not intended to create art or images.”
A stylized blend from white over green to black using Unicode emoji characters. The code itself is written in Crystal without dependencies. It generates a CSV which can then be viewed in any spreadsheet software.
#genuary
Every day I can't wait for the postwoman to arrive. Four #ptpx cards came in today.
From the left top to the bottom right: Trammell Hudson, smn_txyz, Anya Prosvetova and Hubertus.
Day 6 of #genuary2025: “Make a landscape using only primitive shapes.”
Dutch landscape, rects and lines.
#genuary
Day 5 of #genuary2025: “Isometric Art (No vanishing points).”
Keeping it simple today. Cubes shaded with dots.
#genuary
Day 4 of #genuary2025: “Black on black.”
This is Vantablack, Sumi ink black and Raven black on Ebonics black. Eat your heart out, Anish Kapoor!
#genuary
A bit later than I intended, but here is day 3 of #genuary2025: “Exactly 42 lines of code.”
Title: “Stone, Coal, Blood”. It's a take on textile art.
Day 2 of #genuary2025: “Layers upon layers upon layers.”
#genuary
Today's #ptpx harvest from the post office. The black card at the top from slash_ut7, the one at the bottom is from James Merrill.
Day 1 of #genuary2025: “Vertical or horizontal lines only.”
Happy New Year!
#genuary
Another one of those happy accidents I'm really fond of. This was a test to see if the clay would be stable enough to print at a 45-degree inclination. Obviously not, but the end result is interesting enough to investigate intentionally collapsing shapes. Something to explore in 2025.
Be safe and see you all on the other side!
Every year I create a Christmas card for my dad that he can send to family and friends. Here is the one for this year. White and green on 1.5mm grey cardboard.
Created with punt.js, the new genart library I've casually been working on.
I always love happy accidents and this one is particularly great. Instead of using transparent glaze I used porcelain slip on a 3D-printed stoneware clay cup. The emerging patterns are #verygen.
These two beauties from the #ptpx exchange came in. The one at the top is from etchfo, the one at the bottom from jcammarata.
This is my first time participating in the #ptpx postcard exchange, and I really enjoyed working on it.
Last week these 16 cards were sent out to five different countries. #penplotter
For a long time, I neglected my personal space on the web. I didn't see the point in maintaining one since everything happened on social media. But with the user experience going down the drain on social networks, I feel the time is right to host my own website again: https://wout.design